A Markdown editor built for Claude Code.
Claude Code is good at editing prose, but a plain terminal is a bad place to watch it work on your writing. Grove puts the Terminal below your document, so you see every edit land in the text as it happens.
The first milestone covers onboarding and setup.
Draft the announcement after the beta dates settle.
How Claude Code works inside Grove.
The Terminal opens in your document's folder.
Open a Markdown folder and Grove's Terminal starts there. Run claude the way you already do, with your existing subscription. There is no API key to paste into a settings screen.
Edits appear in the document, not in a diff you have to go find.
When Claude Code edits an open file, Grove updates the text in place. Your cursor and scroll position stay where they are, so you can keep writing one paragraph while Claude Code reworks another.
Grove saves your version before every run.
Before Claude Code touches your files, Grove saves the affected documents. If a run goes sideways, you can restore the earlier version from the Timeline without Git and without digging through undo history.
Overlapping edits become a choice, not a surprise.
If you and Claude Code change the same sentence, Grove shows both versions side by side. Keep yours, take Claude's, or combine them. Grove never picks for you.
Why not just use the terminal you have?
You can, and many writers do. The problem is what happens after you press return. Claude Code reports its changes as file paths and diffs, and you end up alt-tabbing between a terminal and an editor to see what your document actually says now. Grove collapses that loop into one window: the document above, the agent below, and a saved version behind every run.
Grove is also a working Markdown editor on its own. Formatting shows in the text, links and search work across every folder you open, and your files stay as plain .md exactly where they already live. If you stop using Claude Code tomorrow, nothing about your notes changes.
Try Grove with Claude Code.
We’ll email you when beta access is available.
Grove is free during beta and requires macOS 26 or later on Apple silicon.