Compare the Top Rich Text Editors that integrate with Google Docs as of August 2025

This a list of Rich Text Editors that integrate with Google Docs. Use the filters on the left to add additional filters for products that have integrations with Google Docs. View the products that work with Google Docs in the table below.

What are Rich Text Editors for Google Docs?

Rich text editors are software tools that allow users to create, edit, and format text with various styles, fonts, and embedded media, making it suitable for documents, emails, blogs, and content management systems. These editors provide an intuitive interface with tools for text formatting (such as bold, italics, underline), paragraph alignment, font selection, and the insertion of images, links, and videos. Rich text editors are often used in web applications to facilitate content creation without requiring users to know HTML or other coding languages. They may also include features like spell check, auto-formatting, and collaborative editing for team-based content creation. Compare and read user reviews of the best Rich Text Editors for Google Docs currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    Tiptap

    Tiptap

    Tiptap

    ​Tiptap is a headless, open-source rich-text editor framework designed for developers building modern, collaborative applications. Built on ProseMirror, it offers a modular architecture with over 100 extensions, enabling the creation of custom editors tailored to specific user needs. Tiptap supports real-time collaboration through its open source backend, Hocuspocus, allowing multiple users to edit documents simultaneously with features like live cursors and offline editing. It also integrates AI capabilities, such as the content AI extension, which provides in-line text transformations and AI-driven suggestions to enhance content creation. Developers can further extend functionality with features like commenting systems, document management, and import/export options for formats like DOCX. Tiptap's UI components and React templates facilitate rapid development of editors resembling applications like Notion or Google Docs.
    Starting Price: $49 per month
  • 2
    Slate

    Slate

    Slate JS

    Slate is a completely customizable framework for building rich text editors. Slate lets you build rich, intuitive editors like those in Medium, Dropbox Paper or Google Docs, which are becoming table stakes for applications on the web, without your codebase getting mired in complexity. It can do this because all of its logic is implemented with a series of plugins, so you aren't ever constrained by what is or isn't in "core". You can think of it like a pluggable implementation of contenteditable built on top of React. It was inspired by libraries like Draft.js, Prosemirror and Quill. Slate is currently in beta. Its core API is usable now, but you might need to pull request fixes for advanced use cases. Some of its APIs are not "finalized" and will (breaking) change over time as we find better solutions. The most important part of Slate is that plugins are first-class entities.
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