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After buying the Superhuman email app, Grammarly renamed its parent company to Superhuman while keeping the Grammarly product name.
In short: Grammarly changed the name of its parent company to Superhuman in October 2025, while keeping the Grammarly product name.
Grammarly, best known for its writing suggestions in a browser extension, rebranded its parent company to “Superhuman” in October 2025. The Grammarly product itself is still called Grammarly.
This followed Grammarly’s purchase of Superhuman, an email app, in July 2025. Instead of folding Superhuman into the Grammarly name, the company used Superhuman as the new umbrella name for the whole business. It is a bit like a house changing its family name to match a new family member, while everyone keeps their first name.
Under the Superhuman umbrella, the company says it now has a wider “productivity suite,” meaning a set of work tools. That set includes Grammarly (writing help), Superhuman Mail (email), and Coda (a workspace for docs and projects). It also includes Superhuman Go, a new assistant that can connect to apps like Gmail, Jira, Google Drive, and Google Calendar to help with tasks like scheduling meetings and logging support tickets.
The rebrand also comes after Grammarly introduced eight specialized AI “agents” in August 2025. In this context, an agent is a focused helper that does one job, like predicting how a specific audience might react to text or rewriting something in a different tone. The company also launched Grammarly Authorship, which labels whether text was typed by a person, generated by AI, edited by AI, or pasted in.
For everyday users, this signals that Grammarly is trying to be more than a writing checker. It wants to be a bundle of tools that can help across email, documents, and scheduling, which could change what you pay for and where your work data flows.
Source: The Verge AI