Grammarly serves more than 40 million daily active users and tens of thousands of organizations, including a majority of the Fortune 500, according to the company’s own August 2025 disclosure tied to its Forbes Cloud 100 listing. That scale frames a year of structural change for the 16-year-old writing tool: a $1 billion nondilutive financing deal in May 2025, two acquisitions, and an October 29, 2025, rebrand that moved Grammarly into a four-product suite under a new parent company called Superhuman Platform Inc.
The numbers below cover users, revenue, funding, enterprise adoption, the Coda and Superhuman acquisitions, the corporate rebrand, word-volume scale, workforce changes, founder origins in Kyiv, pricing tiers, and competitive position.
Key Takeaways
- Grammarly serves more than 40 million daily active users, according to the company’s 2025 Forbes Cloud 100 listing announcement.
- The company reports annual revenue exceeding $700 million, per its May 29, 2025, financing announcement.
- Grammarly secured $1 billion in nondilutive growth financing from General Catalyst’s Customer Value Fund on May 29, 2025.
- The Grammarly product works across more than 1 million apps and websites, per the company’s About page.
- The parent company was renamed from Grammarly Inc. to Superhuman Platform Inc. on October 29, 2025, per TechCrunch reporting on the rebrand.
- Grammarly serves tens of thousands of organizations, including a majority of the Fortune 500, per the company’s December 2024 Coda acquisition announcement.
- Founded in 2009 by Alex Shevchenko, Max Lytvyn, and Dmytro Lider, Grammarly is now headquartered in San Francisco.
Editor’s Choice
- Annual revenue of $700 million as of May 2025.
- Last equity valuation of $13 billion, set in a 2021 Series funding round.
- General Catalyst Customer Value Fund commitment of $1 billion, structured as nondilutive revenue-secured financing.
- Coverage across more than 1 million apps and websites, per Grammarly’s About page.
- More than 1 billion words are checked per day across the user base, per aggregated public usage figures.
- Roughly 14 trillion words are processed per year by the platform.
- 230 employees were laid off in a February 2024 restructuring.
Recent Developments
- October 29, 2025: Grammarly’s parent company rebranded to Superhuman Platform Inc. and launched the Superhuman Suite, including a new AI assistant named Superhuman Go.
- August 5, 2025: Grammarly was named to the 2025 Forbes Cloud 100 ranking of top private cloud companies.
- July 1, 2025: Grammarly announced its acquisition of Superhuman, the AI-native email client; financial terms were not disclosed.
- May 29, 2025: Grammarly secured $1 billion in nondilutive growth financing from General Catalyst’s Customer Value Fund.
- December 17, 2024: Grammarly announced its agreement to acquire Coda, with Coda CEO Shishir Mehrotra becoming Grammarly’s CEO upon close in early 2025.
- February 7, 2024: Grammarly laid off 230 employees, approximately 23% of staff, as part of a restructuring tied to its AI focus.
Grammarly User and Reach Statistics
- More than 40 million daily active users rely on Grammarly, per the company’s 2025 Forbes Cloud 100 announcement.
- The platform integrates with more than 1 million apps and websites, per Grammarly’s About page.
- Grammarly had a million active daily users by 2015, per Wikipedia’s reference summary of historical company milestones.
- The user base expanded to approximately 30 million by 2021, ahead of the company’s last equity round.
- Sacra’s 2025 analyst note pegs the active organization counts at over 50,000, alongside the more than 40 million daily active users figure.
| Metric | Value | Year | Source |
| Daily active users | 40 million+ | 2025 | Grammarly Forbes Cloud 100 announcement |
| Apps and websites supported | 1 million+ | 2026 | Grammarly About page |
| Daily active users (historical) | 1 million | 2015 | Grammarly press cited via Wikipedia |
| Total users (approximate) | 30 million | 2021 | Grammarly press cited via Wikipedia |
| Active organizations | 50,000+ | 2025 | Sacra |
Source: Grammarly company announcements, Sacra
For a comparable look at platform-scale user statistics on a different consumer SaaS product, see our Spotify user statistics coverage.
Most coverage still calls Grammarly a writing assistant, which is accurate at the product level. At the corporate level, Grammarly is now one of four products inside a parent company that filed paperwork to rename itself in late 2025. Across our coverage of 50-plus AI tool statistics pages, that pattern recurs: capability and identity shifts run several quarters ahead of public perception.
Grammarly Revenue and ARR Statistics
- Grammarly’s annual revenue exceeds $700 million, per the company’s May 29, 2025, financing announcement.
- Annual recurring revenue reached approximately $700 million in May 2025, up from approximately $650 million at the end of 2024, per Sacra’s analyst summary.
- Sacra cites approximately $250 million in 2024 GAAP revenue, with growth driven by enterprise seat expansion.
- The General Catalyst Customer Value Fund repayment structure uses a fixed, capped percentage of revenue rather than equity, per the May 2025 announcement.
By the numbers: According to Grammarly’s May 29, 2025 financing announcement, the company’s annual revenue is more than $700 million, supporting a nondilutive $1 billion commitment from General Catalyst’s Customer Value Fund. The repayment structure ties capital return to a fixed, capped percentage of revenue, leaving the 2021 equity valuation untouched.
| Metric | Value | Period | Source |
| Annual recurring revenue | $700 million+ | May 2025 | Grammarly press release |
| Annual recurring revenue | ~$650 million | End 2024 | Sacra |
| GAAP revenue | ~$250 million | 2024 | Sacra |
| Implied ARR growth | ~7.7% | End 2024 to May 2025 | Derived from Sacra figures |
Source: Grammarly press release, Sacra
For revenue benchmarks among SaaS productivity peers, see our Microsoft 365 statistics coverage.
Grammarly Funding and Valuation Statistics
- Grammarly raised $110 million in its 2017 round, $90 million in 2019, and $200 million in 2021 at a $13 billion valuation, per Wikipedia’s summary of company funding history.
- The May 2025 General Catalyst Customer Value Fund commitment totaled $1 billion and is structured as nondilutive revenue-secured financing.
- The Customer Value Fund had previously deployed capital to nearly 50 companies, including Lemonade and Ro, per TechCrunch’s coverage of the Grammarly deal.
- TechCrunch cited an anonymous investor in the company saying Grammarly’s market valuation today is significantly lower than the $13 billion 2021 figure, despite the sticker price being preserved by the nondilutive structure.
- The capital structure allowed Grammarly to avoid a down round, per TechCrunch reporting.
Grammarly Enterprise and Fortune 500 Adoption Statistics
- Grammarly serves tens of thousands of organizations worldwide, including a majority of the Fortune 500, per the company’s December 2024 Coda acquisition announcement.
- The company’s August 2025 Forbes Cloud 100 listing reaffirmed the more than 40 million daily active user count and tens of thousands of organizations served.
- Sacra’s 2025 analyst note cites over 50,000 organizations on Grammarly, alongside the more than 40 million daily active users figure.
- Coda Brain, the enterprise AI agent layer that came with the Coda acquisition, integrates with more than 800 applications, per Grammarly’s December 17, 2024 announcement.
- The 2025 Forbes Cloud 100 ranking is published annually by Forbes in partnership with Bessemer Venture Partners and Salesforce Ventures, per Grammarly’s announcement.
Key finding: According to Grammarly’s December 2024 Coda acquisition announcement, the company already served tens of thousands of organizations including a majority of the Fortune 500. Coda Brain, the enterprise AI agent layer added with the deal, integrates with more than 800 applications, broadening Grammarly’s reach into structured workflow data beyond text.
| Metric | Value | Source |
| Organizations served | Tens of thousands | Grammarly Coda announcement |
| Fortune 500 penetration | Majority | Grammarly Coda announcement |
| Active organizations (Sacra) | 50,000+ | Sacra |
| Coda Brain app integrations | 800+ | Grammarly Coda announcement |
| Forbes Cloud 100 listing | 2025 | Grammarly press release |
Source: Grammarly Coda announcement, Grammarly Forbes Cloud 100 announcement, Sacra
Grammarly Acquisition Statistics: Coda and Superhuman
- Grammarly announced its agreement to acquire Coda on December 17, 2024, with Coda last valued at $1.4 billion following its 2021 Series D round.
- Coda CEO Shishir Mehrotra, a 25-year tech veteran who previously served as YouTube’s chief product officer and chief technology officer, became Grammarly’s CEO at close.
- Outgoing Grammarly CEO Rahul Roy-Chowdhury stepped down to an advisory role alongside Mehrotra, per TechCrunch reporting on the deal.
- Grammarly announced its agreement to acquire Superhuman, the AI-native email client, on July 1, 2025; financial terms were not disclosed.
- Both deals’ financial terms remained undisclosed, a pattern consistent with privately held buyer and target company practice.
| Acquisition | Announcement | Target valuation | New CEO/leadership impact |
| Coda | Dec 17, 2024 | $1.4 billion (2021 Series D) | Shishir Mehrotra became Grammarly CEO |
| Superhuman | Jul 1, 2025 | Not disclosed | Product continues; tech feeds Grammarly platform |
Source: TechCrunch, Grammarly press releases
The Superhuman Rebrand and Parent Company Statistics
- On October 29, 2025, Grammarly officially rebranded its parent company to Superhuman, with Grammarly Inc. renamed to Superhuman Platform Inc., per TechCrunch’s coverage of the announcement.
- The new Superhuman Suite contains four products: Grammarly’s writing partner, Coda’s collaborative workspace, Mail’s AI inbox, and a new AI assistant called Superhuman Go.
- Superhuman Go integrates into Grammarly’s existing browser extension and connects with apps, including Jira, Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Calendar, to complete tasks like logging tickets or retrieving scheduling availability.
- Paid plans for the new suite start at $12 per month for Pro and $33 per month for Business when billed annually, per TechCrunch reporting on launch pricing.
- The Grammarly product brand continues unchanged at the consumer level even after the parent company’s renaming, per the company’s October 29, 2025 announcement.
| Suite product | Origin | Function |
| Grammarly | Original product (2009) | Writing assistant |
| Coda | Acquired December 2024 | Collaborative documents and workspace |
| Acquired July 2025 (Superhuman) | AI email client | |
| Superhuman Go | Launched October 2025 | Cross-app AI assistant |
Source: Grammarly rebrand announcement, TechCrunch
The rebrand is the inflection point. A 16-year-old grammar checker absorbed two acquisitions in 12 months and renamed its holding company after the smaller of the two acquired brands. That signals the new corporate center of gravity is agentic AI, not editing.
We track the broader category trajectory in our AI agents statistics pillar, which contextualizes Grammarly’s pivot against agentic AI adoption rates across the enterprise.
Grammarly Word Volume and Correction Statistics
- Grammarly checks more than 1 billion words per day across its user base, per public Grammarly usage data aggregated by Expanded Ramblings.
- Grammarly users make over 1 billion corrections per week, per the same aggregated public usage figures.
- The platform integrates with more than 1 million apps and websites globally, per Grammarly’s About page.
- The platform’s reach across more than 40 million daily active users underpins the trillion-word annual volume.
Why it matters: According to public Grammarly usage figures aggregated by Expanded Ramblings, the platform checks more than 1 billion words per day and processes roughly 14 trillion words per year, with users making over 1 billion corrections each week. That makes Grammarly’s correction throughput one of the largest text-processing volumes in consumer software.
This correction throughput sits adjacent to broader AI tool usage we track in our AI in social media tools statistics coverage.
Grammarly Workforce and Layoff Statistics
- Grammarly laid off 230 employees on February 7, 2024, as part of a business restructuring tied to its AI focus, per TechCrunch reporting.
- The cut represented approximately 23% of staff, given the workforce had grown to roughly 1,000 people from 200 over the previous five years.
- The layoffs affected most Grammarly functions and geographies, per the company’s statement summarized by TechCrunch.
- CEO Rahul Roy-Chowdhury said in a statement: As we strengthen our focus toward driving the AI-enabled workplace and deepen our technical investments in AI, we will need a different mix of capabilities and skillsets.
- Severance for affected employees included a minimum of three months of base pay plus health insurance, per the same TechCrunch report.
| Metric | Value | Source |
| Layoffs (Feb 7, 2024) | 230 employees | TechCrunch |
| Approximate share of staff | 23% | TechCrunch |
| Workforce (pre-layoff) | ~1,000 | TechCrunch |
| Workforce (5 years prior) | ~200 | TechCrunch |
| Severance minimum | 3 months base pay + health | TechCrunch |
Source: TechCrunch
Grammarly Founder and Ukrainian Origin Statistics
- Grammarly was founded in 2009 by Alex Shevchenko, Max Lytvyn, and Dmytro Lider, per Wikipedia’s summary of the company’s history.
- The company is headquartered in San Francisco, with additional offices in Kyiv, New York City, and Vancouver.
- Two of Grammarly’s founders became billionaires, with a net worth of approximately $4 billion each as of February 2022.
- Grammarly donated approximately $5 million from its Russian and Belarusian revenues since 2014 to Ukrainian humanitarian groups after the 2022 invasion.
- The company donated approximately $500,000 to rebuild the Okhmatdyt children’s hospital in July 2024 following the missile strike on the facility.
The takeaway: According to Wikipedia’s referenced summary of Grammarly’s history, the company was founded in Kyiv in 2009 by Alex Shevchenko, Max Lytvyn, and Dmytro Lider, had a million daily users by 2015, and grew to approximately 30 million users by 2021. Two co-founders reached an approximate $4 billion personal net worth each by February 2022.
For comparable workforce data on another high-growth tech company, see our How Many People Work at Nvidia coverage.
Grammarly Pricing and Subscription Tier Statistics
- Grammarly Pro starts at $12 per month when billed annually, or $30 per month when billed monthly, per the Grammarly pricing page.
- The Pro plan includes 2,000 generative AI prompts per month and replaces the legacy Premium plan.
- The Business plan is available for teams of 1 to 149 seats and starts at approximately $15 per seat per month when billed annually.
- Enterprise plans are custom-priced for organizations with 150 or more seats.
- TechCrunch’s October 2025 launch coverage noted Business pricing of $33 per month when billed annually for the new Superhuman Suite tier, a separate SKU from legacy Grammarly Business.
Grammarly’s Position in the AI Writing Assistant Market
- Sacra’s 2025 analyst note frames Grammarly’s competitive set as Microsoft Editor, Apple’s writing tools, and broader AI assistants like ChatGPT.
- Grammarly serves more than 40 million daily active users and tens of thousands of organizations, per the company’s August 2025 Forbes Cloud 100 listing announcement.
- The Customer Value Fund deployment to nearly 50 companies, including Lemonade and Ro, places Grammarly among a small set of late-stage SaaS companies whose recurring revenue base qualifies for nondilutive growth capital at scale.
- Grammarly Pro’s 2,000 monthly generative AI prompt allowance, per the pricing page, signals a shift from rules-based grammar checking toward generative writing assistance as the core value proposition.
- The Coda Brain integration layer’s coverage of more than 800 applications positions the combined platform to compete with horizontal AI productivity suites rather than vertical writing tools.
The competitive frame matters. Microsoft Editor ships free with Word and Outlook. Apple Intelligence ships free with macOS and iOS. ChatGPT bundles writing assistance inside a general AI subscription. Grammarly’s path forward, the rebrand suggests, runs through agentic AI and cross-app productivity, where a 17-year-old company can charge for orchestration that Microsoft and Apple have not yet bundled.
For a labor-market view of these AI productivity tools and their workforce impact, see our AI job loss statistics coverage.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Grammarly’s parent company is Superhuman Platform Inc., following an October 29, 2025, rebrand. The Grammarly product itself continues under the Grammarly brand inside the Superhuman Suite, which also includes Coda, Mail, and Superhuman Go. CEO Shishir Mehrotra leads the combined company; he joined as CEO when Grammarly acquired Coda in early 2025.
Grammarly has more than 40 million daily active users, per the company’s August 2025 Forbes Cloud 100 listing announcement. The figure was reaffirmed in Sacra’s 2025 analyst note, which also cites over 50,000 organizations on the platform. The user base expanded to approximately 30 million by 2021, up from a million in 2015.
Grammarly’s annual revenue exceeds $700 million as of May 2025, per the company’s General Catalyst financing announcement. Sacra’s 2025 analyst note cites approximately $650 million in annual recurring revenue at the end of 2024 and approximately $250 million in 2024 GAAP revenue, with growth driven by enterprise seat expansion.
Grammarly is not publicly traded. The company is privately held, and last raised equity capital in 2021 at a $13 billion valuation. The May 2025 $1 billion General Catalyst round was nondilutive revenue-secured financing rather than equity, preserving the 2021 valuation on paper while avoiding a down round.
Grammarly was founded in 2009 by Alex Shevchenko, Max Lytvyn, and Dmytro Lider. Two of Grammarly’s founders reached billionaire status with a net worth of approximately $4 billion each as of February 2022, per Forbes data summarized in Wikipedia.
Grammarly laid off 230 employees on February 7, 2024, representing approximately 23% of a roughly 1,000-person workforce. CEO Rahul Roy-Chowdhury attributed the cut to a shift toward AI-focused capabilities and skillsets rather than cost reduction. Severance included a minimum of three months of base pay plus health insurance.
Conclusion
Grammarly enters this year as a writing tool with more than 40 million daily active users, more than $700 million in annual revenue, and a parent corporation that no longer carries its name. The October 29, 2025, rebrand to Superhuman Platform Inc. closed a 12-month sequence that included the December 17, 2024, Coda acquisition, the May 29, 2025, General Catalyst nondilutive raise, and the July 1, 2025, Superhuman email acquisition.
Each move pulled the company further from its origin as a grammar checker for students into the broader category of agentic AI productivity. For enterprise buyers, the more than 40 million daily users and the majority Fortune 500 footprint signal staying power even as competitors like Microsoft Editor and Apple Intelligence bundle similar functionality at no marginal cost.
For investors, the preserved $13 billion sticker valuation against the nondilutive structure leaves the real market value question unanswered until a future equity event. For end users, the Grammarly brand stays on the product even as the corporate masthead changes, a reminder that this year’s biggest shifts in software companies often happen one layer above what end users see.