Senior Solutions Architect at a computer software company with 51-200 employees
Real User
Top 10
2024-11-13T15:57:34Z
Nov 13, 2024
The pricing for GitHub Copilot is around $10 per month. While it offers significant productivity gains, lowering the price to $5 could encourage more users. If the price were lower, it might be more worth it, even if only used a few days a month.
The product has a tiered pricing model that starts with a free version for individual developers but requires a separate license fee for enterprise use.
I would rate the pricing a five out of ten, where one is very cheap and ten is very expensive. So it's affordable. There are no additional costs to the standard license. So the price is fixed.
Technical Program Manager at a healthcare company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
Top 5
2023-11-07T09:45:48Z
Nov 7, 2023
A personal license is priced at ten dollars per month, while a professional or enterprise license costs nineteen dollars per user, and these rates are consistent for all users.
The product offers a free version and a paid version. Whether to choose the product's free version or paid version depends on the size of the company where it will be used. If your company size is going to increase and many people plan to use the product, then GitHub will charge you a certain amount. The account on GitHub I use is free for a year, after which I need to start paying if I want to use the solution. In my company, for some of the users, I have seen that certain payments need to be made to GitHub CoPilot.
GitHub CoPilot accelerates developer productivity with code generation, test case creation, and code explanation. It provides context-aware suggestions, integrates with popular IDEs, and supports multiple languages.GitHub CoPilot significantly boosts development efficiency by reducing coding and debugging time. Its user-friendly auto-complete and variable detection features streamline complex tasks, serving as a learning tool for developers. Areas needing improvement include its accuracy,...
The pricing for GitHub Copilot is around $10 per month. While it offers significant productivity gains, lowering the price to $5 could encourage more users. If the price were lower, it might be more worth it, even if only used a few days a month.
I am not really included in the cost management part, so I don't have insights into the pricing or setup costs.
For personal accounts, it seems pricey. However, for organizations, it is a good value for money.
Each user needs their license, whether it's a big team or a small team.
The product has a tiered pricing model that starts with a free version for individual developers but requires a separate license fee for enterprise use.
GitHub CoPilot is less expensive than other solutions.
The pricing is reasonable. I think it is 10 USD per user.
We have a demo license. Once we understand what we'll do, we'll start with a paid license.
There is a need to pay around 10 USD to be able to use the solution.
Initially, OpenAI is free, but you'll need to pay for it later.
I would rate the pricing a five out of ten, where one is very cheap and ten is very expensive. So it's affordable. There are no additional costs to the standard license. So the price is fixed.
A personal license is priced at ten dollars per month, while a professional or enterprise license costs nineteen dollars per user, and these rates are consistent for all users.
GitHub CoPilot comes readily available for enterprise customers, so it's a free add-on if you already have GitHub's enterprise license.
The product offers a free version and a paid version. Whether to choose the product's free version or paid version depends on the size of the company where it will be used. If your company size is going to increase and many people plan to use the product, then GitHub will charge you a certain amount. The account on GitHub I use is free for a year, after which I need to start paying if I want to use the solution. In my company, for some of the users, I have seen that certain payments need to be made to GitHub CoPilot.