SuperSTEM is the EPSRC National Facility for Aberration-Corrected Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy. It has been in operation at the Daresbury Laboratory for more than 10 years, but its funding was recently renewed through the EPSRC Mid-Range Facilities initiative. In this presentation, I will highlight some of the scientific contributions that SuperSTEM had made that highlight the capabilities of the facility. These include applications to the structural determination of crystal defects, heterostructure interfaces, identification of impurity atoms in graphene and probing of their bonding through electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS), and measurements on Fe nanoparticles in liver tissue. A new instrument for SuperSTEM has been funded, with a target EELS resolution of 30 meV that aims to allow the detection of bond vibrations. I will conclude with details of how the facility may be accessed by researchers.