"AI email" got crowded fast in 2026. Every productivity SaaS slapped "AI inbox assistant" onto something. Most of them save you no real time — they just summarise emails you'd have skimmed anyway in 30 seconds, charge $20/mo for the privilege, and insert a cool-looking sidebar you'll close after a week.
This guide compares the four AI email tools that actually move the needle on inbox time. Verdicts by what kind of inbox you have, what you're trying to fix, and whether the time saved actually justifies the monthly fee.
The honest framework — what AI in email is actually for
There are exactly three things AI in email can do that meaningfully save you time:
- Auto-draft replies in your voice. A model that's read enough of your past emails generates a 90%-correct first draft. You edit lightly and send. Saves real minutes per long email.
- Triage and summarisation at scale. When you have 100+ unread emails, AI tells you which 10 actually need a response right now. Saves real minutes per inbox check.
- Search that actually works. "Find that email from Lisa about the budget last quarter" — semantic search across email + attachments + threads, in seconds. Saves real minutes per "where did I put that" moment.
Things AI in email can't meaningfully save you time on:
- Reading short emails. You read those in 5 seconds — no summary saves time.
- Composing short replies. "Sounds good!" doesn't need an AI draft.
- Decisions you've been avoiding. The AI can draft "I'm sorry but no" — you still have to send it.
Pick AI email tools by which of the three categories above is your actual bottleneck.
Best overall — Superhuman
EDITOR'S PICK
Superhuman
$30/mo individual, $30/mo Team. AI auto-drafts in your voice (trained on your sent mail), instant fuzzy search across years of email, snippets, send-later scheduling, read receipts, calendar integration. Speed is the unifying obsession — every interaction is keyboard-first, sub-100ms. Mac, Windows, iOS, Android, web.
Best for: founders, executives, salespeople, recruiters — anyone whose inbox is a serious time sink and whose hourly value is meaningfully above $30.
Visit Superhuman →
The honest case for Superhuman:
- AI drafts in your voice. This is the difference between AI that helps and AI that adds friction. Superhuman has trained models on user sent-mail patterns since 2023, and the drafts feel like you wrote them — not like ChatGPT wrote them.
- Instant search. Sub-100ms results across years of email. After two weeks of using it, you can't go back to Gmail's 2-second loading state.
- Keyboard shortcuts that actually compose.
e archives, r replies, i inbox. Long-time users genuinely never touch the mouse.
- Calendar + contact intelligence. Hover over a sender; see their last 5 emails, last meeting, common contacts. Useful for the type of inbox where "remembering what I owe Lisa" matters.
The honest case against:
- $30/mo is genuinely expensive. It's the price of a full ChatGPT Plus + Claude Pro stack, just for an email client. Justified for some, hard to justify for others.
- Onboarding is high-touch. They want a 30-min onboarding call. Not for everyone.
- No real free tier. Trial only.
Quick math: if Superhuman saves you 30 minutes/day and your time is worth >$60/hour, the ROI is overwhelming. If you spend 20 minutes a day on email and your time is worth $30/hour, it's not.
Best value — Shortwave
BEST VALUE
Shortwave
Free tier (basic), $9/mo Personal, $14.99/mo Pro. Built by ex-Google Inbox team after Google killed Inbox. AI summaries, AI auto-replies, smart bundling (groups related conversations), calendar integration, deep Slack integration. Pro tier adds longer AI memory and unlimited AI uses.
Best for: people who want most of Superhuman's value at half the price.
Visit Shortwave →
The case for Shortwave:
- Built by people who already designed the best email client of the 2010s. Inbox by Gmail was the gold standard before Google killed it. The Shortwave team brought the philosophy back, then layered AI on top.
- AI summaries are genuinely useful for long threads. "Here's what was decided in this 23-message email chain" beats reading them.
- Bundling is back. Long-time Inbox users will recognise the workflow — Shortwave groups newsletters, receipts, social notifications, and personal threads automatically.
- $14.99/mo Pro is half Superhuman's price for a comparable feature set on the AI side.
The case against:
- Less keyboard-shortcut polished than Superhuman. Mouse + keyboard hybrid, not pure-keyboard.
- Smaller team / younger product — moves fast but occasional rough edges.
- No real desktop app on every platform as of April 2026 (web + mobile + Mac native; Windows is web-wrapped).
For most readers wondering "do I really need Superhuman?", Shortwave is the right comparison test. Try Shortwave first; if you outgrow it, move up.
Best free — Gemini in Gmail
BEST IF YOU PAY FOR GOOGLE ONE
Gemini in Gmail (Google Workspace + One AI Premium)
Included with Google Workspace ($14/user/mo Business Standard or higher) or Google One AI Premium ($19.99/mo). 'Help me write' generates AI drafts directly in Gmail's compose window. 'Summarise this thread' gives one-paragraph summaries of long chains. Smart Reply (free, has been around for years) suggests short canned responses. Calendar + Docs integration is best-in-class because it's all Google.
Best for: Workspace users (most companies) and Google One AI Premium subscribers who want competent AI inside the Gmail they already use.
Visit Google Workspace →
The honest case for Gemini in Gmail:
- It's free if you already pay for Google One AI Premium ($19.99/mo) — which also bundles 2TB cloud storage and Gemini Advanced. Net cost may be effectively $0 for many readers.
- The integration is the deepest — Gemini sees your Gmail + Calendar + Drive + Docs natively, where Superhuman / Shortwave see Gmail through OAuth.
- 'Help me write' is genuinely good for first drafts of long professional emails.
- No new app to learn — it's Gmail with AI bolted on. Zero migration cost.
The honest case against:
- Gmail-the-client is not built for speed the way Superhuman / Shortwave are. The keyboard shortcuts exist; they're slower.
- No real bundling — Gemini summarises but doesn't restructure your inbox.
- Triage features are weak. Gemini can summarise; it doesn't tell you "these 5 emails actually need a reply today."
If you live in Google Workspace and your inbox is manageable, Gemini in Gmail is the right starting point. If your inbox is overwhelming, you need a real third-party client.
Best for Notion users — Notion Mail
FOR NOTION POWER USERS
Notion Mail (currently in public beta)
Free during beta (April 2026); pricing not yet announced for GA. Notion's email client integrates email directly with Notion pages and databases. Email-to-page workflow (turn an email into a Notion task), AI summaries, threading. Auto-categorisation pulls emails into 'views' similar to Notion databases.
Best for: Notion power users who want their email and their workspace in the same mental model.
Visit Notion Mail →
The case for Notion Mail: if your work life lives in Notion (project plans, knowledge base, meeting notes), Notion Mail is the only email client that integrates email as part of the same workspace. Email becomes a database row you can filter, view, and connect to projects. For the right user, this is meaningfully different.
The case against: it's still beta as of April 2026, the AI features are less mature than Superhuman/Shortwave, and the workflow is overkill if you're not already a Notion power user.
Honourable mentions
A few worth knowing about:
- HEY (from Basecamp) — opinionated email approach: "screener" lets you whitelist senders, "Imbox" keeps real mail clean. Not AI-focused but genuinely opinionated. $99/yr.
- Spike — "conversational email" UI (looks like chat). Has AI features. Niche but loved by some.
- Mimestream — native Mac Gmail client (no AI, but blazing fast). Good for Mac users who want native + speed without the AI premium.
- Microsoft Copilot in Outlook — equivalent to Gemini in Gmail for the Microsoft 365 world. Included with M365 Copilot ($30/seat/mo).
- MailMaestro / Lazy AI — third-party AI plugins that bolt onto existing email clients. Cheap, narrow, fine for users who want AI replies without switching email clients.
Side-by-side
|
Superhuman |
Shortwave |
Gemini in Gmail |
Notion Mail |
| Cheapest paid |
$30/mo |
$9/mo (Pro $14.99) |
Bundled with Workspace / One AI Premium |
Free (beta) |
| Free tier |
❌ Trial only |
✅ Limited |
✅ if you have Google One |
✅ Beta |
| AI auto-draft in your voice |
✅ Best |
✅ |
⚠ Generic-ish |
⚠ |
| AI summaries of threads |
✅ |
✅ |
✅ |
✅ |
| Smart triage / 'what needs a reply' |
✅ |
✅ |
⚠ |
⚠ |
| Instant search |
✅ Best |
✅ |
⚠ Slow Gmail search |
⚠ |
| Keyboard-first |
✅ Best |
✅ |
⚠ |
⚠ |
| Calendar integration |
✅ |
✅ |
✅ Best (native Google) |
✅ |
| Cross-platform polish |
✅ Best |
⚠ Mac/web/mobile |
✅ Web-everywhere |
✅ Web/desktop |
| Best for |
High-volume executive inbox |
Most readers |
Workspace/Google One users |
Notion power users |
Pick by your inbox
| Your inbox is... |
Pick |
| Founder/exec receiving 200+ emails/day |
Superhuman |
| Knowledge worker, 50–100 emails/day |
Shortwave |
| Manageable; you mostly just want better drafts |
Gemini in Gmail (bundled) |
| Workflow-driven and lives next to your Notion docs |
Notion Mail |
| Sales rep doing high-volume outbound |
Superhuman + a sales tool (Outreach/Apollo) |
| You hate AI and want speed only |
Mimestream (Mac) or HEY |
| You're on Outlook |
Microsoft Copilot in Outlook |
| You want to try one for two weeks |
Shortwave free (lowest commitment, real value) |
What's NOT worth your money
- Generic "AI email" Chrome extensions charging $10–20/mo that just inject ChatGPT into Gmail. You can recreate this with a system prompt + Gmail. Don't pay.
- AI 'inbox zero' coaches that promise behaviour change. Tools don't change behaviour. The drag is the unprocessed emails, not the lack of an app.
- Newsletter-aggregator apps marketed as "AI email assistants." They aggregate newsletters; they don't help you with actual email. Useful for a different use case.
- Premium AI email tiers above $40/mo unless you're literally a CEO. Even Superhuman at $30 is at the high end for the value provided.
Common AI email mistakes
- Subscribing for "AI replies" then editing every reply heavily anyway. Pay attention to whether you actually use the AI output. Most users send 30% as-is, edit 50%, throw away 20%. If your throw-away rate is >50%, the model isn't trained on enough of your style — give it more time before deciding it's not for you.
- Letting AI auto-archive without review. Bundle and triage features should suggest, not act. Auto-archiving is how you miss things.
- Using AI to write to people you should have just called. Some conversations are a 5-minute call, not a 30-minute email exchange. AI doesn't fix that misjudgement; it accelerates it.
- Stacking three AI email tools. Pick one. Use it for 30 days. Then evaluate.
- Ignoring the underlying inbox volume problem. If you get 300 emails/day, the problem is upstream — too many subscriptions, too many automated alerts, too many CCs. Unsubscribe, mute, opt out before adding more tooling.
FAQ
Is Superhuman really worth $30/mo?
For high-volume professional inboxes (founders, executives, salespeople): yes, the ROI is overwhelming if you save even 20 minutes/day. For a normal worker with 30–50 emails/day: probably no — Shortwave or Gemini in Gmail does enough.
Is Shortwave a real Superhuman replacement?
For most users, yes. The AI features are at parity, the speed is good (not Superhuman-level), the price is half. The one gap: Superhuman's keyboard-first polish. If keyboard-first is your religion, pay the premium.
Will Gmail eventually have all of this for free?
It already has most of it via Gemini integration (paid Workspace tier). For free Gmail users, expect AI features to roll out gradually but with limits. The third-party tools will keep a feature gap because they iterate faster.
What about Outlook + Microsoft Copilot?
Equivalent value if you live in Microsoft 365. Same architecture (AI bolted onto existing client), same trade-offs vs dedicated tools.
Can I use Superhuman + ChatGPT for replies?
You can; it's the worst of both. Superhuman's AI is already trained on your voice — using ChatGPT separately means context-switching and worse output.
Are these tools secure with my email?
All four major options encrypt connections, follow OAuth best practices, and respect Gmail/Workspace permissions. Read each company's privacy policy. Superhuman, Shortwave, and Notion Mail process email contents (necessary for AI features) — that's a deliberate trade-off you accept when you sign up.
What about offline access?
Superhuman, Shortwave, and Mimestream all have native apps that work offline. Gmail web works offline with the offline mode enabled. Notion Mail's offline support is still rough.
Should I pay for AI email if I work for a company that pays for Workspace?
Try Gemini in Gmail first — it's already paid for. Add a third-party tool only if your inbox is genuinely the bottleneck.
The verdict
For most readers in 2026: Shortwave Pro at $14.99/mo is the sweet spot — meaningful AI, real time savings, half the price of Superhuman. Step up to Superhuman if your inbox is genuinely brutal and your hourly value is high. Stick with Gemini in Gmail if you're already paying for Google One AI Premium and your inbox is manageable. Try Notion Mail beta if Notion is your operating system. Skip everything else for now.
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