Draft is the only writing editor that researches alongside you—finding sources, surfacing quotes, and sharpening your prose without breaking your flow.
No credit card. No installation. Write in 30 seconds.
You're mid-sentence. You need to verify that claim about remote work statistics. Suddenly you're seven Google tabs deep, you've lost your train of thought, and twenty minutes have vanished.
Or you've written three paragraphs that feel... off. You paste them into ChatGPT, copy the result back, realize it doesn't sound like you, manually fix it, and wonder why this is your process.
Every article becomes a scavenger hunt. Every draft becomes a juggling act. You're not writing—you're context-switching.
A clean surface. No sidebars competing for attention. No AI nagging you. Just you and your words. The intelligence is there—you just don't see it until you need it.
As you write, Draft reads along. When external evidence would strengthen your point, a subtle mark appears in the margin. Click it: relevant articles, supporting data, counterarguments. Ignore it, and it fades. Your choice, always.
Found something worth reading? It opens beside your draft—not in a new tab. The article appears clean, stripped of noise. Highlight a quote. Drag it into your piece. Citation attaches automatically. You never left.
Select any passage. Ask Draft to tighten it, clarify it, or reframe it. The suggestion appears inline—see both versions, take what works, move on. It learns your voice from your writing, so it sounds like you.
Draft doesn't interrupt. It doesn't autocomplete mid-thought or suggest when you don't want suggestions. The AI reads your draft, understands your argument, and surfaces help only when it matters.
Think of it as a brilliant research assistant sitting beside you—one who knows when to speak up and when to stay quiet. Who brings you exactly what you need, right when you need it. You stay in flow. The AI does the context-switching for you.
Racing to publish while maintaining credibility—Draft finds and cites sources while you're still in the draft.
Who want literature discovery to happen during writing, not as a separate research phase that interrupts composition.
Learning to construct arguments—with an AI that guides your thinking rather than replacing it.
Tired of the constant friction between thinking, researching, and writing. If you've ever lost your train of thought because you needed to verify one fact, Draft is for you.
Other tools treated AI as a feature to add. We rebuilt the writing experience around it. The difference isn't what the AI can do—it's how invisible it stays until you need it. Research, writing, and refinement aren't separate steps anymore. They're one fluid experience.
You're arguing that remote work has changed professional identity formation. You write: "The shift to remote work has altered how young professionals build their identity..." and mid-sentence, you realize you need data.
Instead of switching to Google Scholar, losing your thought, and spending 15 minutes hunting, a subtle indicator appears. You click. Three relevant studies surface—one from 2023, one contrasting view, one with the exact statistics you need.
You open the 2023 study in the side panel, highlight the key finding, drag it into your paragraph with citation attached, and you're back to writing. Elapsed time: 45 seconds. Your argument: stronger. Your flow: unbroken.
We're onboarding writers in small groups to refine the experience based on real use. Request access now, and we'll invite you within two weeks.
No credit card required to start. No obligation. Just see if it changes how you write.
Joining 2,847 writers on the waitlist
Draft learns from your previous work and suggests in your style. Every suggestion is yours to accept or ignore. The goal is never to replace your voice—only to help you express it more clearly.
Completely. Your drafts are encrypted, never used for training, and never seen by anyone but you. We make money from subscriptions, not from your words.
No. Draft works with your existing process. Write normally. Use the AI when you want it. Ignore it when you don't. There's no right way to use it.