Superhuman
AI-powered premium email client built for speed and keyboard-first workflows
Overview
Premium email client with AI-powered features including instant reply drafts, email summarization, auto-scheduling, and workflow automation. Known for its speed (under 100ms interaction latency) and keyboard-first design. The most opinionated email client on the market.
Ehsan's Growth Verdict
The fastest email experience money can buy — but "money" is doing heavy lifting
Best for: High-volume email users earning $100K+ who treat inbox management as a competitive advantage
Key Features
- ✓AI-powered instant reply drafts
- ✓Email triage and priority sorting
- ✓Split inbox with automatic categorization
- ✓Undo send and scheduled sending
- ✓Read status tracking and follow-up reminders
Pros
- + Measurably faster than Gmail — users report saving 4+ hours per week
- + AI reply drafts genuinely capture your writing tone after training
- + Keyboard shortcuts make batch email processing 3x faster
Cons
- − $25/mo minimum is steep for an email client
- − Gmail and Outlook only — no support for other providers
- − AI features are now available in free Gmail, narrowing the gap
Pricing
| Plan | Details |
|---|---|
| Growth | $79/user/mo — team features + shared conversations |
| Starter | $25/user/mo — core AI features |
| Enterprise | $99/user/mo — SSO + admin + compliance |
Best Use Cases
Ehsan's Growth Take
Superhuman charges $25-99/mo for email. That sounds absurd until you calculate the math. If you earn $150/hr and Superhuman saves 4 hours per week (their claim, backed by internal data from 800K+ users), that's $2,400/mo in recovered time. The AI reply drafts are legitimately good after a week of training on your sent mail. The hard truth: Gmail's Gemini integration is closing the gap fast. Superhuman needs to keep innovating or become a luxury tax.
Ehsan Jahandarpour
AI Growth Strategist & Fractional CMO
Forbes Top 20 Growth Hacker · TEDx Speaker · 716 Academic Citations · Ex-Microsoft · CMO at FirstWave (ASX:FCT) · Forbes Communications Council