Grammarly has officially rebranded its parent company as Superhuman, signaling a broader focus on AI-driven productivity while keeping the familiar Grammarly product name intact. In other words, Grammarly as a tool isn’t going away. The new Superhuman brand simply becomes the umbrella company overseeing Grammarly, Coda, and Superhuman Mail, now united under one platform.
CEO Shishir Mehrotra explained the change in a blog post titled Becoming Superhuman, writing that most users “don’t think of Grammarly as AI” because it already works quietly in the background. That invisible magic is the foundation for what comes next. “We’re adding a whole team of agents that help you write, research, anticipate feedback, automate tasks, schedule meetings, and much more,” Mehrotra said. “They meet you where you work so you don’t have to change how you work.”
The rebrand introduces the Superhuman Suite, which bundles Grammarly’s writing assistant, Coda’s collaborative workspace, Superhuman Mail’s AI-native inbox, and a new flagship product called Superhuman Go. Go is a proactive AI assistant that works everywhere users do, offering context-aware help inside emails, chats, documents, and other apps. It doesn’t just respond to prompts, it anticipates what you might need next.
For example, Go can pull CRM data into an email draft, highlight open support tickets, or automatically schedule meetings directly within chat threads. It connects to over 100 apps including Gmail, Outlook, Jira, and Confluence, and draws on a growing ecosystem of partner agents from Common Room, Radical Candor, Speechify, Quizlet, and others. Developers can also create their own integrations through the Superhuman Agents SDK, now in closed beta.
Superhuman is also promising a deeper level of proactivity in its acquired apps. Coda will soon summarize meeting notes into action items and even draft follow-up briefs automatically, while Superhuman Mail will generate smart, personalized replies that adapt to a user’s work context and schedule. Mehrotra says the long-term vision is for AI to “fit naturally into where you work,” freeing people to be more creative and impactful without constantly switching tools or writing prompts.
Privacy remains central to the new brand. The company says it continues Grammarly’s long-standing promise not to sell or train AI models on user data. Current Grammarly, Coda, and Superhuman Mail users will keep their existing products and gain access to new capabilities through the unified Superhuman suite.
The suite is now available on paid plans, and Superhuman Go is being offered free through February 1, 2026, via the Grammarly browser extension for Chrome and Edge. Versions for Mac and Windows are coming soon.
While the move helps unify the company’s expanding ecosystem, dropping the Grammarly name at the corporate level could end up being a misstep. Grammarly is one of the most recognizable names in productivity software, and shifting it under a less familiar banner might confuse loyal users who associate the brand with writing excellence rather than AI productivity. Still, the core Grammarly product remains unchanged, and most users will continue to see that name where it matters most, inside their apps.
In Mehrotra’s words, Superhuman aims to make AI “so natural that using it will feel ordinary,” the same way Grammarly made writing assistance feel invisible. If the company succeeds, the next phase of work could be less about managing AI and more about letting it quietly work alongside us.