Spiral 4.0 Goes Agent-native

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TL;DR:Spiral v4 just shipped with four major updates: a style engine that generates writing indistinguishable from your own 87 percent of the time, agent-native access via MCP, CLI, and API, team workspaces for writing in a shared voice, and a $10 price drop, bringing personal plans to start at $15 a month. Spiral will continue to be free for __along with access to all our tools and content.

Try Spiral 4.0 Today we’re announcing a number of updates to Spiral, the writing partner for you and your agent. Spiral is built by writers for writers, to help you from idea to line edit, matching your writing style throughout.

The highlights:

Since re-launching at the end of last year, Spiral has:

It also now averages a 4.9/5 conversation score on our internal LLM-as-judge eval.

We built Spiral to help people who write for work write better. Just as Cursor is a coding harness, Spiral is a writing harness, supporting you at every stage of the writing process. Here’s how:

  1. When it’s time to draft , Spiral uses stylometry to reproduce your voice, working in Every’s know-how where appropriate. For example, if you ask Spiral for tweets, it will incorporate best practices from X’s latest algorithm update.
  2. When you need help polishing a draft, Spiral is your editor. Along with a built-in guardrails against AI-speak, you can set custom writing rules that Spiral applies in a “top edit,” the final expert-level edit on a piece—a term I learned working at Every.

We’ve written about the challenges of getting LLMs to write like you. It’s difficult to prompt an LLM to write like you, let alone get it to stop using common AI phrasing and punctuation. Spiral’s Style Engine is the best solution to this problem we’re aware of. An eval runs on every draft Spiral produces, challenging an LLM-as-judge to spot the generated draft among real samples in a blind lineup. Today we’re at 87 percent on this eval, meaning Spiral’s generated draft blends in with users’ samples almost nine times out of 10. When a draft is spotted, the judge explains why, creating a feedback loop to refine the Style Engine further.

Try Spiral 4.0

Spiral goes agent-native

As Dan Shipper has pointed out , Claude and Codex are increasingly becoming the central interface for all computer work. So we’ve made Spiral available to agents via MCP, CLI, and API.

To try it out, copy and paste this command in your agent:

Help me set up Spiral, my AI writing tool, so you can write in my voice. Read https://writewithspiral.com/agents.md and follow the steps. In short: add Spiral’s remote MCP server at https://api.writewithspiral.com/mcp/ (Streamable HTTP). The first connection opens a browser to sign in to Spiral and authorize access (OAuth, no API key to paste). Then help me write something.

The CLI, or command-line interface, is personally how I use Spiral the most. After I merge a pull request, a cleanup command runs in Claude Code, which calls Spiral to generate tweets about the new feature for the Spiral X account. Spiral markets itself. This technique is now bundled into the compound engineering plugin in the form of the ce-promote command.

In addition to the main spiral write command, the CLI and MCP, or model context protocol, expose “personalize” and “humanize” functions. “Personalize” takes a given piece of text and rewrites it in your voice. “Humanize” does a pass to remove common AI tells, including the dreaded em-dash (which Every’s house style uses, hence its appearance in this piece).

Over 500 agents have been connected to Spiral since we launched the integration last month. Those agents are revising blog posts, generating marketing copy, drafting email replies, and more—automatically, and in the user’s voice. On some days, API sessions outnumber web sessions. And as agent-native usage of Spiral picked up, we realized we needed to adjust our pricing model. As a result, we’re adopting a new token-based pricing model, which is more in line with AI apps like Claude, Codex, and Cursor.

From session limits to token limits

In May alone, Spiral generated billions of LLM tokens, or units of text. While drafts typically range from 500 to 1,000 words, a lot of tokens are processed under the hood to make those drafts great. I’m reminded of the line attributed to French mathematician Blaise Pascal : “If I had more time, I would have written a shorter letter.” It takes a lot of tokens to generate a few good ones.

Before this release, Spiral limited the number of sessions, or unique chats, users could start per month. This approach had two problems. First, some users sent hundreds of messages within a single chat, consuming tens of millions of tokens, while using only 2 percent of their session allotment. Second, API users hit their session limit quickly, because the shape of API usage tends to be many single-turn sessions.

We’re moving to a token-based model, which is in line with how billing works in AI products like Claude and Codex. The personal and team plans come with millions of tokens each month. Once those tokens are consumed, it’s pay-as-you-go for extra token usage. Customers can disable extra usage and set their spend cap.

The good news is that the base prices of the personal and team plans are both dropping by $10. Personal plans now start at $15 per month (down from $25), and team plans start at $25 per user per month (down from $35).

Tell your stories, express your ideas

Technology is at its best when it augments our skill sets—amplifying what we’re good at, assisting with what we’re not. Figma and Canva help designers do better work, and allow people without a design background to manifest what they imagine. Claude Code and Codex help engineers ship more software, and allow people without engineering backgrounds to create the software they always wanted to exist. Our hope is that Spiral helps writers sharpen their work, and allows people without a strong writing background to put their stories and ideas into words.

One Spiral user is a retired musician in Australia. He’s accumulated a lifetime of stories in the studio and on tour. He’d never written them down, because he didn’t quite know how to tell them. Since signing up for Spiral, he’s recorded many chapters of his life stories with the tool’s help. He told me that Spiral has taught him how to be a better storyteller.

That’s what we’re building toward: a writing partner that helps people say what they mean and get better at saying it. Spiral produces good writing fast, but it also explains its writing and editing decisions along the way: the rationale behind rhythm, structure, rhetoric, and more. As my colleague Natalia Quintero observed, the best AI tools teach you things as you use them.

If any of this sounds useful, try Spiral. Share your feedback on X (@tryspiral) or get in touch: [email protected].

Try Spiral 4.0 Marcus Moretti is the general manager of Spiral (@tryspiral).

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