Supermemory's pitch is assistants that remember your users — persistent context and reasoning memory, with chats, docs, and user data unified. They write a lot about agent memory performance, and their Claude-integration posts are popular for a reason: coding agents with memory are genuinely better.
The overlap
- Persistent, retrievable memory for agents and assistants — Kit for AI's remember/recall over API and MCP does this out of the box.
- Claude integration: one MCP config block gives Claude (Code or Desktop) memory, retrieval, and conversion tools.
The difference in shape
- Kit for AI is a toolkit, not only a memory layer: convert any document to Markdown/JSON, ingest URLs with OCR and JS rendering, batch pipelines, live web search.
- Memories and documents share one retrieval system — your agent recalls a decision and cites the PDF behind it in the same query.
- Simple pricing for the whole stack instead of a per-layer bill.
Which should you pick?
For user-memory at consumer-app scale, a specialized memory vendor is worth evaluating. If what you want is an agent that remembers and reads — your files, your links, your knowledge — Kit for AI does both sides with one account. Free to start.