Grammarly vs Wordtune — Which One Wins?

TLDR

Pick Grammarly if: Anyone who writes emails, docs, or posts and wants an always-on safety net that catches mistakes everywhere

Pick Wordtune if: Non-native English speakers and professionals who want to polish existing text rather than generate from scratch

Our take: Grammarly for simplicity, Wordtune for power users.

 GrammarlyWordtune
PricingFree with basic grammar and spelling checks | Pro $12/moFree with 10 rewrites/day | Plus $13.99/mo
FeaturesReal-time grammar, spelling, and punctuation corrections, Tone detection and rewrite suggestions, AI text generation and reply drafting, Works everywhere via browser extension and desktop app, Plagiarism checker on paid plansSentence-level rewriting, Tone adjustment, Text summarizer, AI knowledge retrieval, Browser extension
Best forAnyone who writes emails, docs, or posts and wants an always-on safety net that catches mistakes everywhereNon-native English speakers and professionals who want to polish existing text rather than generate from scratch
Learning CurveEasyEasy

The Real Difference

Both offer free tiers, so the real question is what you get when you start paying.

Grammarly stands out with Real-time grammar, spelling, and punctuation corrections and Works everywhere via browser extension and desktop app. Wordtune counters with Sentence-level rewriting.

Grammarly's Achilles heel: suggestions can be overly conservative and strip personality from your writing if you accept everything blindly. Wordtune's: works at sentence level, not document level — can’t write full articles or long-form content for you. Pick whichever weakness you can live with.

Bottom Line

If you value real-time grammar, spelling, and punctuation corrections and anyone who writes emails,, go with Grammarly. If non-native english speakers and matters more, Wordtune is your pick. Neither is a bad choice — but one will fit your workflow better.

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