Superhuman Emerges as New Identity for Grammarly Following Acquisition

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Superhuman Emerges as New Identity for Grammarly Following Acquisition

Grammarly has officially Superhuman-ed itself after acquiring the productivity software company in July. This transition marks an important evolution in its identity and service offerings. Its goal is to create a more intuitive and personalized user experience, using the latest AI technologies. The rebranding was announced at an event held in San Francisco from October 27 to 29, 2025, where the company showcased its vision for the future of email communication.

Superhuman, famous for its hyperproductivity-generating email client, is about to release some pretty awesome stuff. Once these enhancements are made, its AI assistant will be able to pull data from multiple sources such as Customer Relationship Management (CRM) systems and internal databases. This feature helps users get customized recommendations to improve their email drafts. It strengthens the clarity and impact of its message.

The company offers two subscription plans: the Business plan, priced at $33 per month when billed annually, which includes access to Superhuman Mail and the Pro subscription plan at $12 per month, billed annually, which provides grammar and tone support in multiple languages. These plans fully adapt to user needs, for personal or professional use.

Productivity suite Superhuman has a number of key features at hand to make users more productive. The flexible document suite makes for easy collaboration and editing. At the same time, the email client integrates AI-driven features to streamline writing processes. Superhuman operates an agent store that allows users to browse and experiment with a range of agents. You’ll discover tools such as a plagiarism checker and a proofreader, all created to help you write at the highest possible level.

True to its new identity, Superhuman is looking to double down on AI magic. Future improvements will fill in additional contextual information behind the scenes in email drafts. They’ll be using data from external sources as well as their own internal sources. This acquisition fits in perfectly with Grammarly’s larger push to diversify their product and become a one-stop shop productivity suite.

Superhuman just recently acquired Coda, adding even more strengths in document management and collaboration to Superhuman’s arsenal. This acquisition is a strong indication that the company is serious about delivering users a seamless and integrated experience between its platforms.

Superhuman is even introducing product bundles, grouping together different features and functionality to create complete packages that address a broader range of user needs. The release of Superhuman Go underscores the company’s broader goal of innovative, efficient productivity tools for users.

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