Insider Brief
- Grammarly has rebranded as Superhuman, consolidating Grammarly, Coda, and Superhuman Mail into a unified AI-native productivity platform.
- The new Superhuman suite includes a writing tool, collaborative workspace, intelligent inbox, and Superhuman Go, an AI assistant coordinating context-aware agents across workflows.
- Superhuman Go launches with connector, writing, and partner agents, an open SDK in beta, and privacy commitments ensuring user data is not sold or used for model training.
Grammarly is changing its name to Superhuman with new AI capabilities under a single brand. The rebrand consolidates Grammarly, Coda, and Superhuman Mail into a unified platform built for AI-native productivity, the company announced Tuesday.
“Our vision is AI that makes every person better by working everywhere they work, understanding how they actually work, and bringing them what they need at the right time, so people can stop managing tools and start focusing on work that matters,” Superhuman CEO Shishir Mehrotra said in the announcement.
The company pointed out a disconnect remains between the technology’s potential and its day-to-day usefulness. Most tools operate in isolation, requiring users to manually supply context, craft effective prompts, and bridge gaps between disconnected apps. Rather than streamlining work, this fragmentation often adds complexity. The company said Superhuman addresses this by embedding AI directly into the tools and workflows people already use, cutting down on context switching and minimizing disruption.
The new suite includes four products: the original Grammarly writing tool, Coda’s collaborative documents, Superhuman Mail, and a new assistant called Superhuman Go. Go serves as the connective tissue of the platform, delivering proactive AI assistance across apps by coordinating agents that understand user context, priorities, and tasks.
Superhuman indicated the agents are designed to anticipate user needs by drawing on over 1 million integrations and learning user-specific patterns.
Superhuman Go is launching with an open agent platform designed to embed intelligence directly into the tools people already use. Available through the Superhuman Agent Store, the platform includes a wide range of agents. The company said these agents are designed to help users plan, start, and execute work more efficiently by delivering information, drafting content, and offering expert feedback across workflows.
Three features of Go include:
- Connector agents: Bring real-time context from tools like Google Workspace, Microsoft Outlook, Atlassian Jira, and Confluence into a unified interface, allowing users to ask questions and take action instantly.
- Grammarly writing agents: Provide targeted assistance for tasks like generating ideas, ensuring originality, and predicting how writing will be received—tailored to the user’s tone and intent.
- Partner agents: Offer specialized functionality from trusted providers such as Common Room, Fireflies, Parallel, and Quizlet, with more integrations launching soon to support use cases across industries.
Superhuman plans to expand its Go platform with more agents and partner capabilities over time. Its new Agents SDK, now in closed beta, lets developers build custom agents that can act across more than 1 million apps and websites.
The company also announced the Superhuman Alliance, a partner program aimed at value-added resellers and service providers. Superhuman also noted the company will maintain strict privacy standards, ensuring no user content is sold or used for model training.
The full suite is available starting Tuesday on paid plans, with Go features free through February 1, 2026. The company pointed out existing Grammarly, Coda, and Superhuman Mail users will see no changes to their current products, but will gain access to new capabilities through the unified Superhuman platform. Users retain full control over preferences and permissions across the suite.




