Early access
Join the Diglot beta program
For people who need drafting, translation, grammar review, and rewriting in one calm workflow — not a pile of separate tools. Get early access in waves, with email updates and room for real feedback.
What beta access is for
This is a product beta, not a hype campaign. You help us harden a bilingual writing workflow for real school, work, and publishing use cases.
One connected writing workspace
Draft, translate, check grammar, paraphrase, and review originality in the same flow — built for people who think in one language and publish in English.
Early access in waves
We invite beta participants in waves so we can support onboarding and listen to real feedback without overwhelming the product team.
Product updates you can use
You will get email about important beta milestones: what is new, what to try, and how to report issues or ideas.
A voice in the roadmap
Beta is not a marketing label here — we use structured feedback to prioritize fixes and workflow improvements for non-native English writers.
How the waitlist works
Short path: sign up, stay in the loop, get access when your wave is ready.
- 1
Create an account and join the waitlist from the same registration flow you would use to start on Diglot.
- 2
You will get email confirmation and updates as your wave approaches.
- 3
When your access is ready, you sign in and go through onboarding like any new workspace user.
Is this the right program for you?
A strong match if
- You write in English at least a few times a week for work, school, or publishing.
- You already switch between ideas in another language and final English text.
- You are willing to share concrete feedback: confusing UX, missing workflow steps, or rough English edge cases.
Probably skip if
- You need a one-off grammar check or a single paraphrase — marketing pages and the free tier may be enough to try first.
- You expect “perfect English in one click” for every use case — Diglot is a workflow, not a magic rewrite button.
Beta program FAQ
Practical answers before you join the waitlist.
You can start from the free registration path and join the waitlist without paying. Paid plans on Diglot are separate from the beta queue — check Pricing for what each plan includes once you are in the app.
We do not require a special NDA to join the public beta waitlist. We ask you to use normal good judgment: report bugs and feedback through the channels we provide, and do not share other users’ data if you see it by mistake.
We will point you to in-app or email channels when you are accepted. The most useful feedback is specific: which workflow step, what you expected, and what felt wrong in English or in the interface.
Timing depends on wave size and product readiness. The waitlist email explains where you are in the process; we do not guarantee a fixed date for every region or segment.
No. If you already registered, use the same account and watch your email for beta access. Joining the waitlist again with another email can duplicate your place in the queue — use one primary account.
What the Diglot beta is
The Diglot beta is an early access program for a bilingual AI writing workspace used by non-native English speakers, translators, and students who draft, translate, check grammar, paraphrase, and review originality in one connected editor. If you join the Diglot beta waitlist, you are asking to be considered for the next invite wave when we have capacity for onboarding and feedback — not a separate product from Diglot, but a product beta channel for real-world workflow testing.
Who the beta is for
- ESL professionals who need clearer English for email, reports, and client work — see the ESL writing tool and writing tool for professionals pages.
- Translators and bilingual editors who move between languages in the same session — the beta stress-tests the full AI translator path inside the workspace.
- Students working on essays and coursework — start from the writing tool for students use case, then bring that workflow into the beta.
- Anyone building a repeatable English writing habit who can share concrete feedback on UX, rough edges, and missing steps.
What you can try in the Diglot beta
In the beta you exercise the same modules as production users, with product updates shaped by tester feedback: an AI writing assistant for drafting and rewriting, an AI translator for bilingual comparison, a grammar checker for in-flow correction, a paraphrasing tool, a plagiarism checker for originality review, and writing templates for structured starts. For the full picture, open the workflow map on Features.
Waitlist vs early access vs private beta
These terms show up together in search; here is how we use them on this page.
| Term | What it means for Diglot |
|---|---|
| Beta waitlist | The queue you enter when you register interest. It does not change the product by itself — it signals that you want to be in a future access cohort. |
| Early access | Invited use of the workspace before or ahead of general availability for a segment, usually in waves. If you need the app today without waiting, use Start for free instead of the queue. |
| Private beta / public beta | Smaller closed cohorts (private) vs broader open programs (public). Our company timeline marks a private beta release and a planned public beta milestone — the waitlist here matches the product’s public beta phase. |
Plans and billing while the beta is open
The beta program is about workflow access and feedback, not a separate billing sku. Free registration and paid plans work the same way as for other users — compare limits and features on Pricing when you want to see how a Diglot plan maps to your volume (waitlist position does not replace plan choice once you are in the app).
Beta feedback and roadmap
We use structured input from beta participants to prioritize fixes and workflow improvements. High-level timing — including public beta release and 1.0 — is summarized on the Company page alongside our journey so far.
Get on the waitlist to try the full bilingual flow — from professional email drafting in English to long-form drafting — or start with Start for free if you do not need queue placement.
Ready to get on the list?
Join the waitlist to be considered for the next access wave, or start from the public signup if you do not need beta queue placement.
Write in your language,
publish in English
Move from rough bilingual drafts to clearer English in one connected writing workflow.