Most tools force you to edit. Clarafy is a zero-suggestion chaos translator. Type or dictate a messy stream-of-consciousness, hit a hotkey, and it instantly rewrites perfect text in place. Standout Features: App-Aware: Formats contextually for Gmail, Slack, or ChatGPT. Hold-to-Dictate: Ramble out loud; release to inject polished prose. Tone Matching: Learns and mirrors your unique voice. No suggestions, no underlines. Just one-and-done clarity.
The workflow for fixing your text right now is so annoying: type a rough draft, copy it, open ChatGPT, paste it, ask it to clean it up, copy it back, and paste it again.
I built Clarafy to fix that.
Instead of all that bouncing around, you just hold Ctrl + Space (or Alt + Space on Mac) while your cursor is in any text field. It automatically reads the whole box, does a quick processing animation, and swaps your text with a clean, clear version right in place. No manual highlighting or copy-pasting needed.
If you don't like the edit, a regular Ctrl+Z brings your original draft right back.
The Chrome extension is officially live in the web store today for an early public beta, and I'm currently working on a native Windows desktop app to bring this system-wide.
Check it out, try to break it, and let me know what you think! I'm here to answer any questions or fix any bugs you find.
Love the concept here. Keeping the text sounding like "me" while fixing the messy typing is the hardest part with these tools. How do you guys make sure it doesn't just strip out the user's personal tone and make it sound too generic?
The thing I'd want to stress-test is whether "polished" ends up meaning "sounds like every other AI." Half the internet can already smell the default ChatGPT register now, that over-smooth rhythm where every sentence lands the exact same way. So when you clean up messy input, are you fixing grammar and clarity, or are you also sanding off the voice that made it read like an actual person wrote it?
StyleMemory is the part I'd actually pay for, if it genuinely learns my quirks instead of regressing everyone toward the same clean-but-faceless tone. How many polishes before it's matching me and not the generic house style? And does it ever leave a messy line alone because the rough version was the more human one?
Ctrl+Z bringing back the original is the detail that makes this feel safe to try. You can use it on something important without committing blind. That's a small design call that probably drives a lot of first-time trust. Congrats on the launch!
This sounds useful for someone like me. My thoughts often come out messy, especially when I'm writing reports, I can spend a long time just polishing the wording and trying to make everything sound clear.
I can also imagine this being helpful for understanding customer feedback or support messages. Sometimes users explain their needs in a very long or messy way, and a tool like this could help "translate" the message into something clearer so we can understand the main point at a glance.
Good luck with the launch!
@liam_tidholm this looks super useful and the keyboard short cuts are nice! Quick question, does it adapt to context at all, like knowing a Slack message should stay casual but an email should read more formally, or is it one consistent "clean up" pass for now?
About Clarafy on Product Hunt
“Type messy and have it instantly polished”
Clarafy launched on Product Hunt on June 5th, 2026 and earned 99 upvotes and 11 comments, placing #16 on the daily leaderboard. Most tools force you to edit. Clarafy is a zero-suggestion chaos translator. Type or dictate a messy stream-of-consciousness, hit a hotkey, and it instantly rewrites perfect text in place. Standout Features: App-Aware: Formats contextually for Gmail, Slack, or ChatGPT. Hold-to-Dictate: Ramble out loud; release to inject polished prose. Tone Matching: Learns and mirrors your unique voice. No suggestions, no underlines. Just one-and-done clarity.
Clarafy was featured in Chrome Extensions (52.7k followers), Productivity (653.8k followers) and Education (78.7k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 181.6k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted Clarafy?
Clarafy was hunted by Liam Tidholm. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
Want to see how Clarafy stacked up against nearby launches in real time? Check out the live launch dashboard for upvote speed charts, proximity comparisons, and more analytics.