Grammarly in San Francisco provides its grammar improvement and AI driven writing assistance platform, available on free or paid premium and business plans.
$30
per month
Pricing
Grammarly
Editions & Modules
Pro
$30
per month per member
Enterprise
Contact Sales
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Grammarly
Free Trial
Yes
Free/Freemium Version
Yes
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
Discount available on Pro plan for annual pricing.
Compared to the ProWritingAid, Grammarly helps me with ease of use, real-time suggestions, tone, and clarity suggestions, and integration with other platforms provides cost v/s features above all.
I haven't used other tools, but the simplicity and instant usability of Grammarly alone is what makes it so that I don't even need to look for another similar tool.
While DeepSeek (or similar tools) is effective for specific use cases like sentence rephrasing or creative localization, Grammarly offers a more comprehensive and versatile solution for businesses. Its advanced features, integrations, and focus on professionalism make it the …
Once installed, Grammarly's proofreading abilities across all platforms (email, text, WordPress, etc.) are easy and intuitive. I don't even know if these other AI tools have that ability.
Apple AI has a Grammarly-like product, we tried using it, but it's not overlaid on top, and you need to select the text and then wait for the recommendation. It's possible Apple AI may improve but I cannot imagine it ever directly competing with Grammarly.
I believe that both Grammarly and ProWritingAid are excellent tools that complement each other well. It would be fantastic to see an integration that combines the strengths of both. ProWritingAid provides comprehensive reports that are incredibly helpful. These reports …
I found that ProWritingAid is harder to use than Grammarly and that some of its tips are too technical.
QuillBot was helpful for rewording sentences, but it didn’t check grammar as well as Grammarly does. It’s also not as strong when editing an entire document. In my opinion, …
Grammarly makes it seamless to check your writing. Performance wise, they are about the same. But to use ChatGPT for checking writing, it required you to manually put the text in. It also doesn't allow you to automatically make the changes. It only makes suggestions which you …
To be honest, I have used both and they are very similar. QuillBot has some nice features in their free plan, such as a sidebar rewrite tool, but Grammarly is cheaper. Grammarly has the same tool, but it is just easier to access and use within QuillBot. Overall, the price was …
Grammarly has a much more natural tone to suggestions. Often, when trying to rewrite an email or a letter/document with other products, it's hard to match those tones and still keep your document sounding authentic and with human empathy. Also, having the ability to make …
The only program I know of that is similar is the onboard Apple spell-check, which will often miss several things that Grammarly does not. I also use Google Docs, which is not nearly as helpful as Grammarly since you can use it anywhere. Docs also misses things that Grammarly …
It's not a stack-up per se, but I use it side by side, which is very helpful. ChatGPT helps me by suggesting procedures, letters, and more. This is my go-to app for work.
Grammarly is easy to use and I like its suggestions. Other AI tools are better for generating text, but Grammarly is better at optimizing it and catching grammar mistakes. I also like that it has the extension which makes it easy to use Grammarly anywhere without having to sign …
I have used Grammarly the most by installing it in my windows laptop and by adding an extension to my Microsoft Edge. With the QuillBot, I have just used it on website for trail years before and it kept asking to pay somehow that was super annoying personally. And later in 2020 …
It isn't listed but LanguageTool is very good and I prefer it for the fact you can use it in any platform I have found so far including agency analytics. Therefore, it is easier for me to suggest this as a toolbar add on to the team. It isn't currently listed on TrustRadius …
Nothing comes close to Grammarly in terms of ease of use and quick setup. It practically works right out of the box without any rigorous configuration. It also allows you to pick a specific dialect which isn't available in other apps. And since Grammarly introduced AI features, …
When drafting important emails to clients, stakeholders, or partners, Grammarly ensures the tone is professional and polite while eliminating grammar or spelling errors.While preparing reports, proposals, or presentations for internal or external use, Grammarly helps maintain clarity, proper structure, and a formal tone. Employees whose first language is not English use Grammarly to enhance their writing, making it more fluent and grammatically accurate.
Ease of use - Grammarly is super easy to use. Anyone can use the app whether in a text editor like Microsoft Word or on the Grammarly website.
Integration - This one is a game-changer. It integrates with the main programs I use on a regular basis including email, Microsoft Office, Firefox, desktop, phone and iPads. I didn't need to change to anything or use something different so it was an ideal match.
Goals - This is a really cool function of Grammarly. With Goals, you can choose your audience, formality and domain type. So it works for a wide range of users. Depending on the audience type, Grammarly automatically can suggest changes to your content to help ensure your goals are being met.
User experience/technical issues on certain tools - in Google Calendar, for instance, Grammarly checks text that you type into the "Email Guests" modal window on calendar events. However, because of the way Google calendar works, if you right-click a word that Grammarly highlighted, the calendar event modal window will close and you will lose everything you typed. This is an extremely frustrating experience that has gotten me multiple times.
Incorrect suggestions - it doesn't happen that often, but occasionally Grammarly does highlight words or make suggestions that don't make sense or aren't optimal. I'm sure the Grammarly team is working continuously to improve the tool to make it smarter and smarter.
Lack of support on all platforms - although Grammarly works on most text areas you encounter online, there are still some areas it doesn't work - I'm not sure if this is an issue with Grammarly or not, but I haven't been able to figure it out.
Either I'm as dumb as a bag of nails, or Grammarly has been an invaluable tool in our communication arsenal since we've been users since 2017. I don't recall which podcast we heard it on, but it may have been when Jordan Harbinger was on Art of Charm. I listen to about 8 podcasts a day, so it was probably on something I listened to, demo'd it, and then ponied up for a paid subscription.
It was very easy. I have it applied to all of my browsers as an extension so that I know I have entirely accurate grammar in anything I write for my company. I appreciate having something that will always be applied to anything on my computer. I wish I didn't need to use the Grammarly keyboard on mobile; I want it to read my text boxes like my computer does.
I have not really used customer support. I used the FAQ page to see how to re-install Grammarly because it wasn't functioning properly in longer documents. It seems to be working better now, but it still does not always underline all of the issues in the actual text. Thus, it is sometimes difficult to know where the errors are located.
Perhaps if you have a team that is not overly computer savvy, which in that case, I'd challenge your hiring decision, there's not much involved. I'm sure there are YouTube videos that go in-depth about implementation but it's really quite simple.
Nothing comes close to Grammarly in terms of ease of use and quick setup. It practically works right out of the box without any rigorous configuration. It also allows you to pick a specific dialect which isn't available in other apps. And since Grammarly introduced AI features, its counterparts lost their advantage.