Grammarly

Online grammar checker

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May 2025 Grammarly raised $1 billion in nondilutive funding from General Catalyst.
December 2024 Grammarly announced the acquisition of productivity startup Coda, with Coda CEO Shishir Mehrotra replacing Rahul Roy-Chowdhury as Grammarly's CEO.
September 2024 Grammarly announced the release of its Authorship tool, designed to identify the original source of text passages and determine if they were written by a human or generated by AI.
July 2024 Grammarly donated approximately $500,000 to help rebuild Okhmatdyt children's hospital after it was damaged by a Russian missile strike.
April 2023 Grammarly launched a generative AI product built on GPT-3 large language models, capable of generating and rewriting content, suggesting edits, and creating topic ideas and outlines.
2022 Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Grammarly ceased business operations in Russia and Belarus. The company donated $5 million in net revenue from Russia and Belarus to Ukrainian humanitarian groups and supported Ukrainian employees who joined the army.
2021 Grammarly raised $200 million in its third funding round, reaching a total valuation of $13 billion and growing to approximately 30 million users.
2020 Grammarly made its first outside investment, participating in a $10 million funding round for Docugami, an AI-driven document generation company.
2019 Grammarly added a tone detector to its writing assistant and raised $90 million in its second funding round.
2017 Grammarly raised $110 million in its first funding round.
2015 Grammarly reached one million active daily users and launched a freemium model. The company also introduced browser extensions for Chrome, Safari, and Firefox, and an add-on for Google Docs.

This contents of the box above is based on material from the Wikipedia article Grammarly, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

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