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Grammarly Review 2026: The Writing Assistant That Grew Into an AI Suite

Grammarly is still the default grammar checker for millions, but the gap between the free tier and its now-AI-heavy paid plan is worth scrutinising before you upgrade.

JR Jonah Reeves
AI Tools Editor
Jul 4, 2026 · 5 min read
Grammarly Review 2026: The Writing Assistant That Grew Into an AI Suite — TAV Reviews illustration
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Grammarly is one of those tools most people have used without ever consciously deciding to. It rides along in your browser, quietly underlining a misplaced comma or a repeated word, and for the better part of a decade it has been the default answer to the question “how do I stop sending emails with typos in them?” In 2026 it is still very good at that job. What has changed is everything around the edges: a much larger free tier, generative AI woven through every plan, a pricing reshuffle, and a competitive landscape where general-purpose chatbots can now do a lot of what Grammarly charges for.

That makes this a more interesting product to review than it used to be. The core grammar engine is no longer the whole story, and whether Grammarly is worth paying for depends heavily on how much you write and what else you already subscribe to. This review looks at where it genuinely excels, where it falls short, and who can comfortably stay on the free tier.

What it does well

The single most impressive thing about Grammarly remains its reach. The browser extension, desktop apps, Microsoft Office add-in and mobile keyboard mean its suggestions appear almost everywhere you type, in real time, without you having to paste text into a separate window. That ubiquity is the real product. Plenty of tools can check a paragraph of grammar; very few insert themselves so seamlessly into the moment you are actually writing an email, a Slack message or a document.

The correction quality for the fundamentals is excellent. Spelling, punctuation, subject-verb agreement, run-on sentences and the small mechanical errors that undermine otherwise good writing are caught reliably and explained clearly. For non-native English speakers in particular, this is where Grammarly earns its keep, acting as a patient proofreader that never tires of pointing out the same article or preposition mistake.

Tone detection is a genuinely useful touch. Grammarly reads the emotional register of what you have written and tells you whether it comes across as, say, confident, formal or slightly curt, which is exactly the kind of feedback that is hard to get from a spell-checker and hard to judge about your own writing. On the paid plan, full-sentence rewrites and clarity suggestions take this further, flagging convoluted sentences and offering tighter alternatives.

The free tier deserves specific praise. It now covers grammar, spelling, punctuation, conciseness and tone detection across every integration, plus a modest monthly allowance of generative AI prompts. For a large share of users that is simply enough, and Grammarly deserves credit for not crippling the free experience to force upgrades.

Where it falls short

The most obvious limitation is language. Grammarly checks English and only English. If you write in Spanish, German, French or anything else, it is not a tool for you, and rivals such as LanguageTool cover far more ground here. This is a long-standing gap that shows no sign of closing.

The harder problem in 2026 is differentiation. Grammarly has added generative AI across its plans, and it works fine for drafting, rewriting and summarising. But it is rarely better than the general-purpose chatbots many people already pay for, and if you have a ChatGPT or Claude subscription, a meaningful chunk of Grammarly’s premium AI value is something you can already do elsewhere. The grammar engine is still best-in-class for real-time in-app correction, but the AI layer feels more like table stakes than a reason to upgrade.

Grammarly’s suggestions can also be context-blind. It will confidently flag deliberate stylistic choices, sentence fragments used for effect, or technical terms it does not recognise, and it has a persistent habit of nudging you toward the paid plan with locked “advanced” suggestions. Used uncritically, it can sand the personality out of your writing. It is a tool that rewards writers who know when to ignore it.

Finally, there is the privacy consideration. To generate suggestions, Grammarly sends your text to its servers. For everyday writing that is a reasonable trade, but for confidential legal, medical or commercial material it is worth reading the policies and thinking carefully before letting it analyse everything you type.

Pricing

Grammarly keeps a capable free tier and charges for its individual paid plan on a monthly basis, with a large discount for committing annually. Above that sit team and enterprise options aimed at organisations that want shared style guides, brand tones and administrative controls. The company has reshuffled its tiers recently, folding what used to be separate consumer and business plans into a cleaner structure, so the exact names and inclusions have shifted.

The most important thing to understand about the pricing is the gap between monthly and annual billing. Paying month-to-month is expensive and hard to justify; the value case for Grammarly Premium rests almost entirely on paying for a full year up front. Because the specifics are in flux, treat any figure you read as indicative and check current pricing on Grammarly’s own site before you commit. Students and educators can typically access a discount through third-party verification, which is worth investigating if you qualify.

Who it’s for (and who should skip it)

Grammarly is an easy recommendation for professionals who write a lot of email and documents, for students working on essays and papers, and above all for non-native English speakers who benefit from a tireless, always-on proofreader. If you spend a meaningful part of your day writing in English and want corrections to appear in-line wherever you type, the paid plan on an annual commitment is defensible.

You should skip the paid plan, and quite possibly the tool entirely, if you write primarily in a language other than English. You should also think twice if your main interest is the generative AI features and you already pay for a capable chatbot, because you would largely be paying twice for overlapping capability. And if you are a light, casual writer, the free tier almost certainly covers everything you need, so there is little reason to reach for your card.

The verdict

Grammarly in 2026 is a mature, dependable tool that does its core job better than almost anyone. Its real-time grammar and tone corrections, backed by unmatched integration across your apps, remain genuinely valuable, and its free tier is more generous than it needs to be. The wrinkle is that its premium proposition now overlaps heavily with the general-purpose AI tools people increasingly already have, which makes the paid plan a more considered purchase than it once was. Start on the free tier, use it honestly for a few weeks, and only upgrade if you find yourself repeatedly bumping into its limits.

How it scores

Value for money 7.8
Features & capability 8.3
Ease of use 9.2
Performance & reliability 8.6
Support & ecosystem 8.4

At a glance

Category
AI writing assistant and grammar checker
Developer
Grammarly (part of the Superhuman product family)
Interfaces
Browser extension, desktop apps, MS Office, mobile keyboard, web editor
Free tier
Yes, with grammar, tone detection and a limited monthly AI-prompt allowance
Generative AI
Yes, built in with tiered monthly prompt limits
Plagiarism detection
Yes, on the paid plan
AI-writing detection
Yes (Authorship), on the paid plan
Languages
English only for full checking

The good

  • Real-time corrections that surface as you type in almost any text field
  • The widest integration footprint of any writing tool, from browsers to Office to mobile keyboards
  • Free tier covers the core grammar and spelling needs of most casual users
  • Tone and clarity suggestions are practical and easy to act on
  • Plagiarism and AI-detection tools add real value for editors, students and content teams

The not-so-good

  • English only, which rules it out for multilingual writers
  • Monthly pricing is steep; the headline value only holds if you pay annually
  • Generative AI output is competent but rarely better than a general-purpose chatbot you may already pay for
  • Suggestions can be overzealous or context-blind, and it nudges you toward upgrading constantly
  • Sends your text to its servers for analysis, which is a consideration for sensitive or confidential writing

Frequently asked questions

Is the free version of Grammarly good enough?

For many people, yes. The free tier handles grammar, spelling, punctuation and basic tone detection across every app, plus a small monthly allowance of AI prompts. You mainly pay for full-sentence rewrites, plagiarism detection and a much larger AI-prompt limit.

Does Grammarly work outside the browser?

Yes. Beyond the browser extension there are Windows and macOS desktop apps, a Microsoft Office add-in, and an iOS and Android keyboard, so its suggestions follow you into most places you write.

Can Grammarly check languages other than English?

No. Grammarly only provides full checking for English. Writers who need support for other languages should look at dedicated multilingual tools such as LanguageTool.

Is Grammarly safe for confidential documents?

Grammarly analyses your text on its servers to generate suggestions. For most everyday writing that is fine, but for legal, medical or otherwise sensitive material you should review its policies and consider whether an on-device tool is more appropriate.

How much does Grammarly cost?

Grammarly keeps a free tier and charges for its individual paid plan on a monthly basis, with a large discount for paying annually, alongside separate team and enterprise plans. Because the tiers have been reshuffled recently, check current pricing on Grammarly's site before subscribing.

Sources & further reading

  1. Grammarly Plans and Pricing
  2. Grammarly Product Overview
  3. Grammarly Generative AI
ai-writinggenerative-aigrammar-checkergrammarlywriting-assistant
JR

Jonah Reeves

AI Tools Editor · AI assistants, writing, image & coding tools

Jonah covers the fast-moving AI-tools space — chat assistants, writing and image generators, coding copilots and automation. His job is to cut through marketing claims and explain what each tool is actually good for, at what price, and where its limits are, using published capabilities, pricing pages and community-reported results.

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