Typically, when a company acquires one other, it adopts the new company’s branding or integrates it into its own identity. Grammarly is doing something different: After acquiring email client Superhuman in July, the company is changing its name to “Superhuman.”
Despite the brand change, the Grammarly product will still be often called before. However, the company says that in the long run it is looking at rebranding products comparable to Coda, a productivity platform it acquired last 12 months.
The company is also introducing an AI assistant called Superhuman Go, which is built into the existing Grammarly extension. The assistant can suggest texts, provide feedback on emails, and even connect it to other apps like Jira, Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Calendar to give it more context. The assistant can use these connections to perform tasks comparable to recording tickets or retrieving your availability information when scheduling a meeting.
Superhuman said it plans to add functionality that may allow the assistant to pull data from sources comparable to CRM and internal systems to suggest changes to emails.
Users can try Superhuman Go by turning on the toggle in the Grammarly extension that may allow them to connect it to various apps. Users may also check out various measures in the company’s agent store, including a plagiarism checker and proofreader launched in August.
All Grammarly users can try Superhuman Go now, although the company also sells product bundles. The Pro subscription plan will cost $12 monthly (billed annually) and will support grammar and tone in multiple languages. The Business plan will cost $33 monthly (billed annually) and will give users access to Superhuman Mail.
Superhuman said it also wants to add more AI-powered features to its Coda document suite and Superhuman email clients, comparable to pulling details from external and internal sources to robotically create additional details in documents and email drafts.
Techcrunch event
San Francisco
|
October 13-15, 2026
Over the past few years, Grammarly has made a concerted effort to increase its profitability as an office suite, exemplified by the acquisition of Coda and Superhuman. With this AI assistant, the company can higher compete with firms like Notion, ClickUp and Google Workspace, which have launched many AI-based features over the last few years.
