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Sudowrite Login for Coaches in 2026: Full Walkthrough

Sudowrite Login for Coaches in 2026: Complete Walkthrough and Writing Guide

Quick Answer: To log in to Sudowrite, go to editor.sudowrite.com, enter your email address, and click the magic link sent to your inbox. Sudowrite does not use passwords. Google sign-in is also available. Once inside, the platform gives you AI writing tools built for fiction, with prose refinement features that carry genuine value for non-fiction coaching books: Write, Describe, Rewrite, Brainstorm, and Expand. Pricing runs from $10 to $44 per month on annual billing. For coaches who need the complete pipeline from draft to formatted KDP book, Sudowrite covers prose well and stops before formatting and publishing.


In early 2025, a leadership development coach in Chicago sat down to write her first book after 14 years of client work. She had settled on Sudowrite after reading several positive reviews and spending an afternoon with the free trial. She spent six months inside the platform, generating vivid prose, fleshing out client anecdotes with the Describe tool, and polishing her chapter transitions with Rewrite.

The prose was the best she had ever produced. When she typed the final sentence of chapter ten, she felt the kind of satisfaction that comes from finishing something real.

Then she looked at the manuscript and realized she had no idea how to get it into print.

Sudowrite had no formatting tool. No cover design. No KDP export. She had 62,000 words in a browser-based editor, and she needed to find a separate formatter, a cover designer, and a way to navigate Amazon's publishing requirements. That added two months and costs she had not planned for.

This walkthrough covers everything you need before you start: how to log in, how to set up your account, how the core tools work, and where the platform's limits are for coaches specifically. If Sudowrite is the right tool for your project, you will know by the end of this article. If it is not, you will know that too.


What Sudowrite Is (and What It Is Not for Coaches)

Sudowrite launched in 2020, built by fiction authors who found that general-purpose AI tools could not handle the specific demands of narrative prose: scene pacing, dialogue rhythm, sensory detail, genre convention. Over 100,000 writers have used the platform since launch, from aspiring novelists to published authors on contract deadlines.

The platform's defining feature is Muse, a proprietary language model fine-tuned on published novels and short stories. Where general AI tools generate plausible prose on any subject, Muse understands the difference between a scene that shows a character's fear and a passage that merely reports the character was afraid. That distinction matters more in fiction than non-fiction, but it shows up in coaching books too: the client anecdote that lands with genuine emotional weight versus the one that reads like a case study abstract.

For coaches, the honest summary looks like this:

What Sudowrite does well for coaching books:

Prose refinement on any text: richer sensory detail, varied sentence structure, stronger emotional resonance in client anecdotes. The Story Bible as a project context document that keeps AI generation grounded in your book's core argument and reader profile. Multiple AI model options, including Muse for narrative-forward prose and Claude for factual clarity. A mobile app with shared credits so you can write on your phone and continue on desktop.

What Sudowrite does not cover:

Manuscript formatting for print. KDP requires specific trim sizes, margins, chapter headers, and page number placement that Sudowrite does not produce. Cover design. PDF or ePub export calibrated for Amazon or IngramSpark. ISBN registration. Any direct integration with publishing platforms.

That gap matters more for coaches than it does for novelists who often work toward traditional publishing. A coach who finishes 60,000 words in Sudowrite still needs to route that manuscript through a formatting tool before readers can buy it.

When Sudowrite makes sense for a coach:

You are writing something literary or narrative-heavy. Business memoirs, origin-story books, and books built around client transformation arcs benefit from Sudowrite's prose tools more than a purely instructional manual does. If your book reads in the tradition of Malcolm Gladwell's case-driven style, Sudowrite's sentence-level tools are genuinely useful.

You already have a publishing workflow. If you have used Atticus or Vellum before and understand the KDP process, the missing pipeline is a known cost you can plan for rather than a surprise.

Prose quality is your primary concern. If the sentence-level quality of your writing matters more than publishing speed, Sudowrite is the best-in-class option for the prose layer. No competing platform matches it at that specific task.


How the Sudowrite Login Works in 2026

Sudowrite uses passwordless authentication. You do not create a password when you sign up, and there is no password to reset if you return after a long break.

Step 1: Navigate to the editor.

Open editor.sudowrite.com in any modern browser. Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge all work. The login screen appears automatically if you are not already authenticated.

Step 2: Enter your email address.

Type the email address you want associated with your account. First-time users create an account in this step. Returning users trigger a new session.

Step 3: Wait for the magic link.

Sudowrite emails a secure sign-in link to that address. The link arrives within 30 to 60 seconds under normal conditions. The subject line identifies it clearly as a Sudowrite sign-in request.

Step 4: Click the link.

Clicking the link in your email opens an authenticated session in your current browser. The session persists across browser restarts for most users. You will not be asked to sign in again during normal use unless you explicitly log out or switch to a device you have never authenticated before.

Google Sign-In.

If you prefer a faster return login, Sudowrite supports Google authentication. On the login screen, click "Continue with Google" and complete Google's standard sign-in flow. This is the faster option for coaches who use Google Workspace and want to skip the email step on every session.

Work email and spam filtering.

Some coaches use work email addresses with enterprise spam filtering that routes unknown senders to quarantine. If you use a work email and the magic link does not arrive within two minutes, check your spam folder and your IT quarantine queue. The simpler path is to use your personal Gmail address for Sudowrite, especially for personal book projects.

Mobile app authentication.

Sudowrite has iOS and Android apps. The login process works the same way: enter your email on the app's login screen and tap the magic link in your mobile email app, or use Google sign-in. Credits are shared between the mobile app and the web editor. Any AI generation you run on your phone draws from the same monthly credit balance as your desktop work.

The password question.

Users have submitted requests for a traditional password option on Sudowrite's public feedback board. As of mid-2026, Sudowrite still uses only magic links and Google as its two authentication paths. If passwordless login does not fit your workflow, that is worth knowing before you invest time in the platform.


Choosing the Right Sudowrite Plan for a Coaching Book

Sudowrite prices its plans around credits. Every AI action consumes credits in amounts that vary by the length and type of generation. Running the Write tool to generate a 200-word passage costs more credits than running the Brainstorm tool to generate a list of five ideas.

Hobby and Student: $19 per month / $10 per month on annual billing ($120 per year).

225,000 credits per month. Credits expire at the end of each calendar month.

For a coach using Sudowrite primarily for targeted revision rather than heavy drafting, the Hobby tier is often sufficient. Running the Describe tool on a single paragraph, rewriting a chapter's opening, or generating Brainstorm lists for a single chapter uses credits at a moderate rate. If you write your own first drafts and use Sudowrite for revision passes, 225,000 credits will typically last through a full month of active work on a single book.

Professional: $29 per month / $22 per month on annual billing ($264 per year).

450,000 credits per month. Credits still expire at month end.

Sudowrite positions the Professional tier as the right starting point for anyone actively drafting a book. With 450,000 credits, you can run the Write tool heavily across multiple sessions per week, layer Describe passes onto every significant client anecdote, and use Rewrite across full sections without hitting the ceiling mid-month. For coaches writing a 40,000 to 60,000-word book and planning to use AI tools throughout the draft, Professional is the safer choice.

Max: $59 per month / $44 per month on annual billing ($528 per year).

2,000,000 credits per month. Unused credits roll over for up to 12 months.

The credit rollover is what makes the Max tier genuinely different rather than just larger. Authors writing 80,000-word manuscripts find that they exhaust lower tiers in an intensive sprint week and then struggle to continue. With Max, a heavy drafting month followed by a lighter revision month allows credits to accumulate rather than disappear. For coaches writing one book per year with concentrated writing periods, Max is usually not necessary. The Professional tier covers typical coaching-book workflows.

Free trial.

Sudowrite offers a free trial that includes approximately 10,000 credits with no credit card required. That is enough for several Describe sessions on a chapter you have already drafted, a few Brainstorm runs for your framework naming and chapter titles, and approximately 300 to 500 words of generated prose from the Write tool. The free trial is designed to give you a genuine sense of the interface and prose quality before you spend money.

Choosing between monthly and annual billing.

The annual discount is steepest at the Hobby tier: 47% off the monthly price. If you are confident Sudowrite fits your workflow, annual billing at any tier delivers significant savings. The path that tends to work well for coaches new to the platform: start with a monthly Professional plan, use the first month to evaluate how you actually use the credit balance, and switch to annual billing once you know which tier matches your usage pattern.


The SCOPE Method: A Framework for Coaches Using Sudowrite

Sudowrite was designed for novelists. The Story Bible fields use fiction vocabulary: characters, worldbuilding, genre. The Write tool generates narrative continuations. The Describe tool adds sensory texture in the way a literary novelist would reach for it.

Coaches who take this fiction architecture at face value often bounce off the platform in the first week. The fields feel wrong. The framing feels off. The AI generates content that sounds like a thriller when you are writing about leadership coaching.

The SCOPE Method adapts Sudowrite's fiction-first design for non-fiction coaching books. It treats the platform as a prose co-editor: the coach brings the structure, methodology, and argument; Sudowrite handles sensory texture, sentence variety, and passage-level revision.

SCOPE stands for:

  • S: Set up your Story Bible for non-fiction
  • C: Capture chapter architecture before you generate anything
  • O: Open the Draft tab and write forward with targeted AI help
  • P: Polish selected passages with Describe, Rewrite, and Feedback
  • E: Export your draft and move to the publishing pipeline

The method works best when coaches treat each stage as a gate: complete S and C fully before touching O, and complete O before switching to P.


S: Set Up Your Story Bible for Non-Fiction

The Story Bible is Sudowrite's project context document. It lives in the right panel of the editor and contains fields that shape every AI generation you run. The more precisely you populate these fields, the more on-target the AI output will be.

For fiction writers, the fields are: genre, characters, worldbuilding, writing style, synopsis, and outline. For coaches, each field requires a specific adaptation.

Genre.

Do not leave this as a fiction genre. Write a precise description of your book's non-fiction context:

"Business non-fiction for executive leadership coaches. Direct, warm, example-driven. Similar in tone to The Coaching Habit and The Five Dysfunctions of a Team. No jargon. Chapters close with a concrete action the reader can take."

That one paragraph reshapes every AI suggestion Sudowrite generates for your project. A specific genre note produces suggestions that fit your actual book; a generic note produces generic output that you spend time discarding.

Characters.

Use this field to describe your typical reader. Build a detailed persona:

"Our reader is David, a 38-year-old manager at a mid-size financial services firm who was recently promoted to team lead. He knows his subject matter deeply but has never managed people before. He picked up this book because he is three months into the role and already struggling with accountability conversations. He reads business books on his commute and wants concrete frameworks, not theory."

This persona anchors Sudowrite's examples and framing. When you run the Write tool to expand a passage about difficult conversations, the AI generates content calibrated for a reader who finds those conversations genuinely uncomfortable, not a generalized business reader.

Synopsis.

Paste your book's core argument here in 150 to 200 words. What claim does the book make? What does the reader learn? What changes for them by the final chapter? Be concrete:

"This book argues that accountability in the workplace breaks down at the moment of the conversation, not in the planning stage. Most managers prepare for accountability conversations thoroughly and then abandon the conversation the moment it becomes uncomfortable. The book teaches a three-part structure for staying in the conversation, reading what is actually happening, and reaching a real agreement rather than a temporary peace. By the final chapter, readers have a reliable framework they can use the next morning."

Outline.

List every chapter title and a one-sentence summary of each. This is the most important field for non-fiction coaching books. When Sudowrite's Write tool generates a continuation inside a specific chapter, it draws on this outline to stay on topic. A vague outline produces wandering suggestions; a specific one produces suggestions that advance your actual argument.

Writing Style.

This optional field is where you paste two to three paragraphs of your own writing that you consider representative of your voice. Copy a section of a blog post, a client newsletter, or a chapter from an earlier draft. Sudowrite uses this material to adjust the style of suggestions it generates. For coaches who are concerned about AI output sounding impersonal or corporate, the Writing Style field is the primary lever for pulling suggestions closer to your natural voice.

If you do not yet have published writing you are happy with, skip this field for now and return to it once you have produced a few rough draft chapters in Sudowrite. At that point, paste a section you have edited heavily and feel good about. That edited section will reflect your voice better than an unedited sample.

Spend serious time on the Story Bible before you write a single AI-generated word. Coaches who skip this step report that Sudowrite produces content that wanders off-topic or sounds like generic business writing. Coaches who populate it thoroughly find that Sudowrite's suggestions feel calibrated to their book's specific argument and reader.


C: Capture Chapter Architecture Before Generating

The most common Sudowrite mistake among non-fiction coaches is opening the Write tool to generate a chapter from a blank page. The result is an AI summary of what that topic generally sounds like, not what your specific methodology says about it.

The fix is to own the structure before asking for any AI assistance.

Before generating anything for a chapter, write a skeletal outline inside Sudowrite's editor: a list of the moves the chapter makes. Include the specific examples and client stories you intend to use. Name the transition that connects this chapter to the next one.

Here is what a chapter architecture block looks like in practice:


Chapter 4: Why Managers Avoid the Conversation

  • Opening: Client story about James, VP of operations, who had the same accountability conversation with the same direct report four times in eight months without ever resolving it
  • Core claim: Avoidance is rational in the short term and costly over time
  • Framework: The Comfort Trap, three reasons the conversation stops early
  • Example 1: "I don't want to damage the relationship"
  • Example 2: "They'll figure it out on their own"
  • Example 3: "It's not that bad yet"
  • Pivot: What makes staying in the conversation possible
  • Transition: Chapter 5 introduces the three-part structure that changes the outcome

With that architecture in place, you position your cursor after the opening bullet point and run the Write tool. Sudowrite generates a prose paragraph that opens the chapter using James's situation. You edit that paragraph to sound like your voice and include the specific real details you know. Then you move to the core claim bullet and repeat.

The architecture keeps you in control of the argument. The AI handles the prose output. That division of labor produces better results and faster editing than letting the AI invent the structure.

A note on time investment: building the architecture for a full chapter takes 20 to 30 minutes. Coaches who skip this step often spend two to three hours editing meandering AI output and still end up rewriting from scratch. The architecture pass is faster than it looks.


O and P: Draft, Polish, and Refine with Sudowrite's Tools

With your Story Bible and chapter architectures in place, you are ready to run the AI tools that make Sudowrite valuable.

The Write Tool.

Select a passage or place your cursor at the end of a sentence, then click Write in the left sidebar. Sudowrite generates three to five continuation options. You review them, select the one closest to what you intended, and edit it into your voice.

For coaches, the Write tool is most useful for turning a bullet-point idea into a full prose paragraph, drafting transitional passages between sections, and generating a rough version of an example or client story that you then revise with accurate details. The discipline: always edit the output. The Write tool gives you raw material to react to, not polished prose to publish without revision.

The Expand Tool.

Select a short passage and click Expand. Sudowrite develops that text into a longer version. Coaches use this to take a one-line reference to a client situation and generate a fuller passage that establishes the scene, describes the problem, and captures the emotional weight of what the client faced.

Expand works best when you give it a sentence that contains the specific details you want preserved. "James avoided the conversation for eight months" produces more useful expansion than "he avoided the conversation" because Sudowrite can build on the specifics rather than inventing generic material.

The Describe Tool.

This is Sudowrite's best feature, and it works on non-fiction just as well as it works on fiction.

Select any passage and click Describe. The tool generates sensory details across all five senses: what the situation looks, sounds, smells, feels, and in appropriate cases tastes like. For coaching books, use it when a client story feels flat on the page.

Example: you have written "The team meeting before the reorganization announcement was uncomfortable." Select that sentence and run Describe. Sudowrite might return a paragraph about the way people positioned themselves at the table, the coffee cups that stayed full because no one was drinking, the quality of silence when the leader paused before speaking.

That output needs your editing before it is publishable. But it gives you specific material to work from rather than staring at a sentence you know is not doing enough work.

The Rewrite Tool.

Select a passage, click Rewrite, and choose a mode: "intensify," "simplify," "change tone," or a free-form instruction you type yourself.

For coaches:

  • Use "simplify" on dense methodology sections that have become jargon-heavy.
  • Use "intensify" on pivotal moments in client stories where emotional weight matters.
  • Use free-form instructions for specific adjustments: "make this more direct and less academic" or "reduce the hedge words in this paragraph."

The Rewrite tool maintains the underlying meaning while changing the style. The output needs editing, but the directional change is real.

The Feedback Tool.

Paste a section and ask the AI Beta Reader for feedback. It responds on theme, pacing, and internal consistency. For non-fiction coaching books, the most useful question is: "Does this chapter deliver on the promise made in the opening paragraph?" Chapters that drift away from their stated argument are easy to miss when you have been inside the manuscript for weeks. The Feedback tool catches structural drift from a fresh perspective.

The Brainstorm Tool.

Brainstorm generates lists. For coaches, useful Brainstorm prompts include generating ten names for a framework, eight objections a skeptical reader might raise, six analogies that explain a core concept, and five ways to open a chapter that are not clichés. Brainstorm output is raw material you react to and refine. It removes the blank-page friction from tasks like framework naming, chapter title generation, and objection mapping.

Model selection.

Sudowrite gives you access to multiple underlying AI models: Muse (the proprietary fiction-tuned model), Claude, GPT-4, Deepseek, and Goliath. For non-fiction prose that requires factual grounding and structural clarity, many coaches find Claude produces more precise output. For narrative-forward prose in client stories and anecdotes, Muse produces richer sensory texture. Switching models takes one click from the model selector inside the editor. Test both models on the same passage early in your project to find the combination that fits your book's tone.


E: From Sudowrite Draft to Published KDP Book

When your Sudowrite draft is complete, you face the gap this article has been building toward: the publishing pipeline.

Sudowrite is a prose editor. It does not format manuscripts for print. It does not design covers. It does not produce the PDF or ePub files that Amazon KDP and other publishing platforms require for upload.

Your options for completing the pipeline:

Atticus.

Atticus is a browser-based book formatting tool built for self-publishing authors. You paste your finished manuscript, choose from interior design themes, set your trim size, and export a print-ready PDF and an ePub. Atticus costs $147 as a one-time purchase, which covers the interior formatting step with templates calibrated for the page sizes Amazon KDP and IngramSpark accept. You still need a cover designer separately. Full walkthrough: Atticus Writing Software: The Complete 2026 Walkthrough for Coaches.

Vellum.

Vellum is a Mac-only formatting tool that produces polished book interiors and strong ebook output. It costs $199.99 for unlimited books, making it cost-effective for coaches who plan to publish multiple books. If you work on Mac and care about the visual refinement of your ebook chapters, Vellum is the higher-quality formatting option. Vellum also requires a separate cover solution. Full walkthrough: Vellum Software: The Complete 2026 Walkthrough for Coaches.

Built&Written.

Built&Written is a platform built for coaches, consultants, and entrepreneurs who want to publish a book that generates clients and authority. Unlike Sudowrite, it handles the complete pipeline in one place: AI writing with Voice DNA (the system trains on samples of your existing writing, then generates content in your vocabulary and pacing), professional interior formatting, AI-powered cover design with customizable colors and typography, custom illustrations for chapter art and diagrams, and export as print-ready PDF, ePub, and Kindle formats for direct KDP upload.

Plans start at $15 per month. The Voice DNA system addresses the core concern coaches have about AI-assisted books: that the writing sounds generic and detached from the author's actual voice. Building the voice model from your real emails, articles, and existing drafts produces output that reflects how you actually explain ideas.

If you are starting your book project before committing to any specific tool, evaluating Built&Written alongside Sudowrite is worth the time. The question is whether prose-specific refinement tools (Sudowrite's strength) or a single integrated pipeline from writing to KDP (Built&Written's strength) better matches your goals and timeline. For coaches who want the book finished and in readers' hands as efficiently as possible, the integrated pipeline usually wins. For coaches who want literary prose quality above all else and are comfortable managing the publishing steps separately, Sudowrite delivers at the prose layer. The full comparison between both platforms is at Built&Written vs. Sudowrite vs. Squibler for Coaches in 2026.


How Sudowrite Compares to Other AI Tools Coaches Evaluate

Sudowrite vs. ChatGPT.

ChatGPT is free at its baseline and capable of drafting prose, outlining chapters, and brainstorming content. Its limitation for book-length projects is context management: ChatGPT has no persistent project file equivalent to the Story Bible, and it cannot maintain consistency across a 60,000-word draft without significant manual prompt engineering. Coaches who use ChatGPT for book drafting report spending meaningful session time re-establishing context. Sudowrite's architecture handles that context management in the platform itself.

The tradeoff: ChatGPT is free. Sudowrite costs $10 to $44 per month on annual billing. For coaches who write only occasionally and do not need fiction-quality prose tools, ChatGPT with careful prompting can cover basic drafting needs. For coaches who are actively writing a full-length coaching book and want prose tools that go beyond text generation, Sudowrite is the more purpose-built option.

Sudowrite vs. Squibler.

Squibler is an AI writing tool with strong project management features: a visual timeline for story planning, a scene organizer, and chapter management tools. For coaches writing complex non-fiction with multiple interlocking threads, Squibler's structural organization tools are more developed than Sudowrite's. Sudowrite wins on prose quality at the sentence level. Squibler wins on structural organization for complex projects. Full comparison: Squibler AI Book Writer: The Complete 2026 Walkthrough for Coaches.

Sudowrite vs. Jasper.

Jasper is primarily a marketing content tool with long-form writing capabilities added later. Its architecture was built for short-form content: email sequences, ad copy, social posts, landing pages. For book-length projects, Jasper lacks the context management that a dedicated book writing tool provides. Coaches who have used both report that Jasper produces better results on the marketing materials around a book (launch emails, social content, Amazon descriptions) and weaker results on the book content itself.

Sudowrite vs. NovelAI.

NovelAI is a fiction-writing platform with deeper AI customization than Sudowrite: you can fine-tune models more aggressively and access image generation for character visuals. For coaches, those features are not relevant. Sudowrite's interface is more polished, its Story Bible is easier to set up, and its suite of prose tools (Describe, Rewrite, Expand) is better documented and more immediately useful. NovelAI makes sense for fiction writers who want granular model control. For coaches writing non-fiction coaching books, Sudowrite's more accessible design and clearer onboarding make it the stronger starting point between the two platforms.


What Coaches Ask About Sudowrite

Can Sudowrite help me clean up AI detection flags in my writing?

Sudowrite's Rewrite tool changes sentence structure and vocabulary, which affects AI detection scores as a byproduct. Using any tool specifically to game detection systems is a separate goal from using it to improve prose quality. The stronger path: write your own first draft, use Sudowrite to improve specific passages, and revise the output heavily so your voice is the dominant one in the final text. That approach produces better writing and better detection results as a natural outcome.

How does Sudowrite compare to other AI writing tools for non-fiction?

Sudowrite leads on prose-level refinement because those tools were built for literary fiction and work just as well on narrative non-fiction. It trails general-purpose tools on research-adjacent tasks, and it trails publishing-specific platforms on the complete workflow from draft to KDP-ready files.

Is Sudowrite good for coaches writing business books?

Yes, with adaptations. The SCOPE Method described in this article adjusts the platform's fiction-first architecture for non-fiction coaching books. The prose tools work on any text. The gap is on the publishing side: formatting, cover design, and export are not part of the platform.

How many words can I generate per month?

The credit-based system makes this variable. At the Hobby tier (225,000 credits at $19 per month), expect roughly 8,000 to 12,000 generated words per month depending on which tools you run and how long your generation sessions last. At the Professional tier (450,000 credits at $29 per month), expect 16,000 to 24,000 generated words. Coaches who run Describe and Rewrite passes across many paragraphs exhaust credits faster than coaches who draft their own text and use Sudowrite for targeted revisions.

Is there a free version of Sudowrite?

No permanent free plan. The free trial includes approximately 10,000 credits with no credit card required. That covers several targeted editing sessions to evaluate whether the platform suits your process before you spend money.

What happens when I run out of Sudowrite credits?

Add-on credit packs are available for purchase within the billing section of your account. Check your account dashboard for current rates on credit packs.

Which plan should a coach start with?

Start with the Professional plan on monthly billing at $29 per month. Run a full month of active writing. If you consistently exhaust credits before the month ends, move to Max. If you rarely reach the ceiling, switch to the Hobby annual plan at $10 per month for significant savings.


Key Takeaway

The SCOPE Method in brief: Sudowrite rewards coaches who arrive with clear structure and use the AI for prose refinement rather than structural invention. Populate your Story Bible with a specific reader persona, a precise genre note, and a detailed chapter outline before generating anything. Use Write and Expand to develop skeletal bullet points into prose. Use Describe on anecdotes that feel flat on the page. Use Rewrite on dense methodology sections. Then move to a dedicated publishing platform for formatting, cover design, and KDP export. The Professional plan at $22 per month on annual billing is the right starting point for a coach who is actively writing a book.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Sudowrite login URL?

The main editor and login page is editor.sudowrite.com. Enter your email address and click the magic link sent to your inbox to authenticate.

Does Sudowrite have a password?

As of mid-2026, Sudowrite uses passwordless authentication: email magic links and Google sign-in. No traditional password option is available, though users have requested it on the platform's public feedback board.

Can I use Sudowrite on my phone?

Yes. Sudowrite has iOS and Android apps. Authentication works the same way as the web editor: email magic link or Google sign-in. Credits are shared across devices, so any AI generation on your phone draws from your monthly balance.

How much does Sudowrite cost?

Monthly billing: $19 for Hobby and Student, $29 for Professional, $59 for Max. Annual billing: $10, $22, and $44 per month respectively. A free trial with approximately 10,000 credits and no credit card requirement is available.

Is Sudowrite good for coaches writing business books?

The prose tools work well for non-fiction coaching books. The platform was built for fiction, so you need to adapt the Story Bible fields for non-fiction use (reader personas instead of character profiles, non-fiction genre notes instead of fiction genre labels). The publishing pipeline for KDP formatting and cover design is not part of Sudowrite; you will need a second tool for those steps.

What AI models does Sudowrite use?

Sudowrite provides access to Muse (the proprietary fiction-tuned model), Claude, GPT-4, Deepseek, and Goliath. You switch between models with one click inside the editor.

Can Sudowrite format my book for KDP?

No. Sudowrite is a writing and prose editing tool. Manuscript formatting for KDP requires a separate tool such as Atticus, Vellum, or Built&Written.


Sources

Sources & References

  1. Nerdynav Sudowrite Review 2026
  2. Sudowrite Official Documentation
  3. Sudowrite Beginner Tutorial
  4. Sudowrite Pricing
  5. Built&Written Homepage

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