How to cancel Grammarly Premium
Grammarly Premium costs around $12-$30/month depending on the plan, or $144-$360/year if paid annually. If you signed up for the free version, used it for a while, then 'upgraded to Premium' through a tempting popup, you might be paying $144-$360/year for something you barely use. Grammarly's cancellation is straightforward if you know where to look. The trick is doing it before your renewal date — annual plans auto-renew at full price. Here's how to actually do it.
Find your renewal date first
Grammarly Premium is usually sold as an annual plan (sometimes monthly). Annual plans auto-renew unless you cancel.
To find your renewal date:
1. Log into grammarly.com
2. Click your profile icon (top right)
3. Click 'Account'
4. Look for 'Subscription' or 'Plan' section
5. Find 'Next billing date' or 'Renews on'
Set a calendar reminder 2 weeks before this date. Annual plans charge $144-$360 in one go, so this isn't something you want to forget.
The actual cancellation process
Canceling Grammarly Premium:
Web:
1. Log into grammarly.com
2. Click your profile icon (top right)
3. Click 'Account' or 'Subscription'
4. Click 'Cancel Subscription'
5. Follow the prompts
6. Confirm cancellation
Grammarly's retention offers:
- 50% off for a year (common)
- Pause subscription for 1-3 months
- Switch to monthly plan (usually worse value, but lower upfront)
- 'You can always come back'
If you've decided to cancel, decline the offers and continue to actual cancellation.
Handle Grammarly billed through third parties
If you signed up through Apple App Store, Google Play, or another platform, you need to cancel through them:
Apple App Store:
- Settings > [Your Name] > Subscriptions
- Find Grammarly
- Cancel
Google Play:
- Google Play Store > Profile > Payments & subscriptions
- Find Grammarly
- Cancel
If you signed up through a bundle or partnership (Microsoft Office, some educational programs, etc.), the cancellation process varies. Contact Grammarly support for guidance.
If you're billed by a third party and can't figure out where, contact Grammarly support with your account email — they can look up where your subscription is managed.
After cancellation — what changes
When you cancel Grammarly Premium:
What you keep:
- Your account (still exists)
- All your documents and writing history
- Access to the free version
- Personal dictionary
- Settings and preferences
What you lose (immediately or at period end):
- Premium writing suggestions
- Plagiarism detection
- Tone adjustments
- Word choice enhancements
- Style guide features
- Advanced grammar rules
If you cancel before renewal, you keep Premium features until the end of your paid period. Then it downgrades to free.
The free version is still useful — basic spelling and grammar checking. It's just less comprehensive than Premium.
Get a refund if eligible
Grammarly's refund policy:
- 14-day money-back guarantee: cancel within 14 days of purchase for a full refund
- After 14 days: refunds at Grammarly's discretion
- Annual plans canceled mid-year: usually no refund of remaining months
- Monthly plans canceled mid-month: access until end of billing period
If you're within the 14-day window, contact [email protected] immediately and request a refund. They typically honor the policy without question.
If you're past the 14-day window but want a refund:
- Contact support and explain your situation
- Common reasons that might be approved:
- Auto-renewed without warning
- Charged after free trial ended
- Technical issues you couldn't resolve
- Be polite and specific
If Grammarly won't refund:
- Dispute the charge with your credit card
- Cite the 14-day policy or the issue you experienced
- Banks often side with consumers for subscription disputes
Decide if you need Premium at all
Grammarly Premium is genuinely useful for:
- Professional writers (full-time)
- People who write a lot for work (5+ hours/day of writing)
- Non-native English speakers who want polished writing
- Anyone who needs plagiarism detection
Grammarly Premium is probably not worth it for:
- People who write occasionally
- Anyone whose work is mostly casual emails or texts
- Writers who already have strong grammar instincts
- People who use other tools (Microsoft Editor, ProWritingAid, Hemingway)
Free alternatives:
- Microsoft Editor: built into Word and Outlook, surprisingly good
- Hemingway Editor: highlights complex sentences (one-time $20 for desktop, free web version)
- LanguageTool: open-source, supports multiple languages
- ProWritingAid: free version available, paid version is one-time payment or monthly
For most people writing business emails and basic documents, the free version of Grammarly (or Microsoft Editor built into Word) is enough. Premium is for power users.
Citations & External Resources
This guide was researched using authoritative sources. For further reading, explore the references below:
Frequently Asked Questions
How to cancel Grammarly Premium?
Grammarly Premium cancellation is straightforward, but you need to do it before the renewal date to avoid being charged for another year. For more practical tips, check out our guide on How to stop kids from making in-app purchases.
What is the best way to cancel grammarly premium?
The best way to cancel grammarly premium is to follow a systematic step-by-step approach. Grammarly Premium costs around $12-$30/month depending on the plan, or $144-$360/year if paid annually. If you signed up for the free version, used it for a while, then 'upgraded to Premium' through... You might also find our guide on How to stop kids from making in-app purchases helpful.
How long does it take to cancel grammarly premium?
Most people can cancel grammarly premium within 5 minutes of consistent practice. The exact timeline depends on your starting point and how diligently you follow the steps in this guide. For more help, read our related guide: How to stop kids from making in-app purchases.