Coda review & overview
All-in-one doc that blends text, tables, buttons and automations into interactive workspaces, letting teams build custom project trackers and wikis.
Coda sits in the doc-database hybrid space and is most often picked for docs-as-apps builders, team wikis + trackers, custom workflow tooling. Below is a quick, no-fluff overview to help you decide if it fits.
Key facts
| Category | doc-database hybrid |
| Pricing | Free plan; Pro from ~$10/Doc Maker/mo; Team ~$30/Doc Maker/mo; Enterprise custom (billed annually; pricing per Doc Maker, not per viewer). |
| Best for | Docs-as-apps builders, Team wikis + trackers, Custom workflow tooling |
| Affiliate program | Yes — PartnerStack (migration vers Grammarly) |
Who it's for
Coda makes most sense for docs-as-apps builders.
- Docs-as-apps builders
- Team wikis + trackers
- Custom workflow tooling
Key features
What you actually get with Coda, drawn from independent reviews and the vendor's own documentation:
- Docs that blend text, tables, buttons and views into apps
- Packs to pull/push live data from external apps
- Automations (time- and action-based rules)
- Multiple table views (Kanban, calendar, Gantt-style)
- Templates and building blocks for custom trackers/wikis
- Pricing per Doc Maker rather than per viewer
Integrations
Coda connects with Slack, Google Calendar, Jira, GitHub, Figma, Zapier, Gmail, Salesforce, Microsoft Teams and Intercom.
What makes it stand out
An all-in-one doc that turns text, tables and buttons into custom apps, billed only per Doc Maker.
Who it's best for
Teams wanting docs-as-apps: custom trackers, wikis and lightweight internal tools in one surface.
Strengths & trade-offs
The honest balance for Coda, from independent reviews rather than its sales page. We go deeper in the full Coda review.
Strengths
- + Highly flexible docs-as-apps model
- + Free for viewers/editors; you only pay for Doc Makers
- + Strong for combining wikis, trackers and lightweight apps
Trade-offs
- - Learning curve to build complex docs
- - Now part of Grammarly/Superhuman after acquisition; long-term direction uncertain
- - Most Packs require Pro; all Packs require Team
Notable facts
Concrete, checkable details rather than marketing claims:
- Pricing is per Doc Maker, not per viewer (viewers and editors are free)
- Coda was acquired by Grammarly, which rebranded to Superhuman; Coda is now part of the Superhuman suite
- Grammarly/Superhuman confirmed existing Coda plan, pricing and billing remain unchanged
- Most Packs are available on Pro; all Packs require the Team plan
Sources
The features and facts above on Coda are drawn from these independent reviews and vendor pages: