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    Home»AI Reviews»AI Chatbot Pricing Comparison: Here’s What You Get When You Pay
    AI Reviews

    AI Chatbot Pricing Comparison: Here’s What You Get When You Pay

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    AI Chatbot Pricing Comparison: Here's What You Get When You Pay
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    In our age of AI, the thought of paying for a chatbot isn’t such a wild idea. With more advanced reasoning and growing agentic capabilities, spending money on the latest from Google, Anthropic or OpenAI makes a lot more sense than it did just a year ago. Still, depending how you use AI, you might never need to pay up, but power users looking to get the most out of their chatbot of choice likely won’t mind too much. 

    If you have no allegiances to a particular chatbot, you might want to see exactly what you get when you pay up for AI — keeping in mind that paying doesn’t always equal ad-free. Some premium AI plans come with a lot more than higher access, too, so if you’re trying to find the plan with the most value, you’ve come to the right place. 

    Below, we’ll break down how much each plan of some of the most popular chatbots costs and what your money actually gets you.

    By the numbers

    Here’s a price breakdown of the most popular chatbots. 

    Chatbot premium pricing

    Chatbot Tier Monthly / Annual Price
    ChatGPT Go $8 | No annual pricing
    ChatGPT Plus $20 | No annual pricing
    ChatGPT Pro $100 | No annual pricing
    ChatGPT Pro $200 | No annual pricing
    Gemini Plus $8 | $80 / year
    Gemini AI Pro $20 | $200 / year
    Gemini AI Ultra $100 / No annual pricing
    Gemini AI Ultra $200 / No annual pricing
    Claude Pro $20 | $200 / year
    Claude Max $100-$200 / No annual pricing
    Perplexity Pro $20 | $200 / year
    Perplexity Max $200 | $2,000 / year
    Copilot Personal $10 | $100 / year
    Copilot Family $13 | $130 / year
    Copilot Premium $20 | $200 / year
    Grok SuperGrok $30 | $300 year
    Grok SuperGrok Heavy $300 | $3,000 year

    ChatGPT Go, Plus and Pro

    The ChatGPT logo on a phone and background.

    ChatGPT’s premium pricing is straightforward and is easy to understand what its features and limitation are. 

    Anadolu/Contributor/Getty Images

    OpenAI’s first paid tier, Go, is its newest plan. For only $8 a month, you’ll get higher limits and more access across the board. That said, if you’re looking to avoid ChatGPT’s ads, you won’t be able to do so with this plan and will need to bump up to the next tier to go ad-free. 

    The second premium plan is ChatGPT Plus, which opens the doors to extended GPT-5.5 access and higher limits on messaging, uploads, data analysis and image generation. You’ll also get advanced voice mode with video and screensharing and the ChatGPT agent. 

    If you want more, you can opt for one of ChatGPT’s Pro plans, which cost $100-$200 a month. The $100 plan will net you 5x usage and the $200 plan gives you 20x more usage. The Pro plans will provide Pro reasoning with ChatGPT 5.5 Pro, Maximum Codex tasks, and unlimited file uploads and image generation. The plans also give users maximum memory, deep research and agent mode. Those on the Pro plans will also get first dibs on trying out new features for ChatGPT.

    (Disclosure: Ziff Davis, CNET’s parent company, filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)

    Google AI Plus, Pro and AI Ultra

    the Google Gemini AI logo is seen displayed on a smartphone screen

    Google’s Gemini may be the most accessible chatbot of them all, and its premium pricing tiers fall in line with the competition. 

    Thomas Fuller/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images

    With Gemini, Google is integrated at the heart of the chatbot experience, making it a great option for Google users. 

    Despite the abundance of features in the Google AI Pro plan, Gemini’s free tier offers plenty for most people. Like ChatGPT, Google also introduced a $8 plan. The Plus plan offers 200GB of storage and more access to the latest Gemini models. Once you start shelling out some cash for Google’s AI plans, higher usage access and more features follow. 

    Google’s AI Pro offers more features across the board than the free and Plus version, unlocking Gemini in Google Workspace apps, 1,000 credits for the Flow filmmaking tool and more advanced models in Search’s AI Mode. It doesn’t stop at Gemini, though. You’ll also get 5TB of storage for Google Photos, Drive and Gmail, along with a YouTube Premium Lite plan. This plan also includes a 10% credit on purchases from the Google Store. 

    During Google I/O 2026, the AI subscriptions got shaken up once more. There are now two AI Ultra plans that unlock different features and higher usage limits. 

    The newest plan is AI Ultra ($100), offering 5x higher usage limits compared to the AI Pro Plan. The $100 option gives access to Gemini 3.5 Flash, priority access to Google Antigravity and a YouTube Premium Individual plan. Google says this plan was specifically tailored for developers, technical leads, knowledge workers and advanced creators. 

    The highest tier of Google’s AI subscriptions is the now-$200 plan, down $50 from when it was introduced. This plan offers 20x higher usage limits compared to the $100 plan. 

    Both AI Ultra plans offer access to Gemini Spark, Google’s 24/7 agent that can act on your behalf and perform tasks for you. It can tap into other Google products and get things done for you in the background — as long as you’re willing to give it even more of your data. 

    Lastly, the $200 AI Ultra plan gives subscribers access to Project Genie, an advanced generative AI model that can build 3D worlds for just about anything you want. 

    Copilot

    Microsoft’s Copilot has the advantage of being preinstalled on a ton of Windows computers, making it incredibly accessible (like Gemini on Android). Although it’s based on ChatGPT models with Microsoft Graph, Copilot feels different enough to be its own thing. 

    To my surprise, Copilot produced the most interesting images when I compared it to the other chatbots. Sometimes Gemini and ChatGPT generated similar images, but Copilot nearly always produced something more distinct. Even if I don’t do it all that often, I still consider it a go-to feature. 

    Much like Google, Copilot integrates well with Microsoft 365 apps, though some of its features are locked behind Microsoft 365 for Business, like its NotebookLM competitor, Copilot Notebooks. Without jumping into 365 for business, Copilot offers three plans that give you access to higher limits and allow you to use it in select Microsoft 365 apps. The upgraded plans will also give you access to Deep research models and Actions, which allow Copilot to fill out forms for you or assist in shopping. 

    Perplexity

    Perplexity AI logo on an iPhone screen with an abstract code texture backdrop

    Higher tiers of Perplexity’s premium bundles in its AI Comet browser

    Joseph Maldonado/CNET

    Perplexity is our favorite chatbot for research, but the free version limits you to three Pro searches and Research uses per day. That might be fine for casual users, but those really trying to tap into Perplexity’s capabilities will want a bit more of everything, and you’ll need to pony up $20 a month to really get going with it. 

    Perplexity Pro will give you unlimited Pro Searches and unlimited file uploads, and more file uploads per Space. It will also unlock image generation and access to more advanced models than the standard “best” model in the free version.  

    Perplexity also has Comet, its limited-access web browser with AI baked right in. Pro and Max subscribers receive Comet Plus included in their subscription. 

    Claude Pro and Max

    claude-ai-9831

    Premium Claude plans have vague limitations.

    James Martin/CNET

    The paid version of Anthropic’s Claude is in line with the competition, costing $20 a month, and it boasts a 5x boost in usage per session versus the free version during peak hours, though limits are still in place. Basically, if you send basic inquiries of up to 200 English sentences, each roughly 15 to 20 words, you’ll be able to send about 45 messages every 5 hours with Claude Pro. 

    Despite taking the top spot on our best chatbot list, Anthropic’s pricing page for Claude’s Pro and Max plans feels a bit dry compared to others on the list. The $20 Pro plan’s first feature with “more usage” is immediately followed by an asterisk that references the limits in place for the Pro plans. Such limits are to be expected for anything that’s not the top plan, but they seem to depend on how you’re using Claude. In addition to more usage, the Pro plan will unlock Claude Code, unlimited Projects, access to Research mode and more Models. 

    The Max plan offers even more usage than the Pro plan, increases the output limits on all tasks, provides priority access during peak traffic times and offers early access to new Claude features. This bump is likely helpful for the Claude power users out there and costs $100 per person per month.

    Grok

    Grok logo

    Grok is the most expensive chatbot of the lot.

    Future Publishing/Getty Images

    Grok’s premium tiers are the most expensive for personal use, whether on a monthly or annual basis. The first premium tier, SuperGrok, will increase access to both Grok 3 and 4, extend token limits to 128,000, give you priority voice access, and include the Imagine image model. It costs $30 a month, or $300 for a year. This tier also opens access to Ani and Valentine AI companions. 

    The next tier up is SuperGrok Heavy, and is mostly “more” of what you get from SuperGrok for $300 a month or $3,000 per year. This tier will give you preview access to Grok 4 Heavy, extend access to Grok 4, and provide unlimited access to Grok 3. SuperGrok Heavy has a higher token count and early access to new features. 

    Chatbot Comparison heres pay pricing
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