# Why every AI tool costs twenty dollars a month now

> Source: <https://dev.to/ninghonggang/why-every-ai-tool-costs-twenty-dollars-a-month-now-5e82>
> Published: 2026-06-17 11:05:52+00:00

I went down a rabbit hole this morning reading the late-2025 Juejin AI pricing guides back to back, and the thing that finally crystallized for me is that the entire AI tool industry has quietly converged on a twenty-dollar-a-month price ceiling, and almost nobody is talking about it as the story it actually is. ChatGPT Plus at twenty dollars. Claude Pro at twenty. Google AI Pro at 19.99, which honestly might as well be twenty. Cursor at twenty. GitHub Copilot at ten for the basic plan but twenty for the Pro tier that most teams I know actually use. Midjourney at thirty, which is the only serious outlier above the line, and even they offer a ten-dollar entry point. The two-hundred-dollar ChatGPT Pro tier exists but it is not the default for anyone I know who is not doing heavy research work, and the free fall in API pricing over the last year, ninety percent in some segments according to one of the Juejin pieces, has been pushing the consumer-tier subscriptions into line with each other in a way I had not really noticed until I read four pricing posts in one sitting.

The piece that pushed me over the edge was the 2025 AI tool pricing guide post, which laid out the math cleanly: Google AI Pro at 19.99 with a million-token context window and a student-tier free year, ChatGPT Plus at 20 with GPT-4o and the eighty-messages-per-three-hours cap, Claude Pro at 20 with five-times the usage of the free tier and Claude Code integration, and then a whole row of secondary players — Perplexity Pro at 20, Poe from 5 to 249.99, Midjourney at 10, 30, and 120, and Grok Premium Plus which apparently crept up to 40 dollars from 22. To be fair I have not stress-tested Grok the way I have with Cursor and Claude Code, so I want to actually run it for a quarter before I oversell or undersell it, but the shape of the recommendation is the part that has been rattling around in my head all morning. Every serious paid AI subscription on the market in 2026 is somewhere between ten and thirty dollars a month, and twenty is the gravitational center.

The meta-pattern I want to put down before I forget it is that the convergence on twenty dollars is not a coincidence, it is the result of a price war that finished while nobody was watching, and the Juejin pricing posts are the clearest evidence of it I have read. A year ago you had ChatGPT Plus at 20, Copilot at 10, and then a long tail of tools charging anywhere from 5 to 50 dollars with no obvious reason for the spread. Now the long tail has compressed. Perplexity Pro is at 20. Midjourney is 30 but only because the image generation market is still willing to pay a premium. The Chinese-language tools — DeepSeek, 通义灵码, Kimi, 智谱 GLM — are mostly free or near-free because the domestic market dynamics are different, but the international subscription products have all landed in the same place. I am a little skeptical of any list that promises a "complete" AI tool stack because the only complete stacks I trust are the ones engineers actually run for a quarter and rewrite, but the budget math for a working engineer in 2026 is now genuinely tractable: two paid tools at twenty each, one free fallback, and you are out the door for less than a Netflix-and-Spotify combo.

What I think this means practically, at least for me, is that the question of "which AI tool should I pay for" is no longer really a pricing question. It is a workflow question, and the fact that the prices have aligned has freed me up to actually think about which tool I want to be using rather than which one I can afford. The pricing guide post pointed out that annual subscriptions save ten to twenty percent, which matters less than it used to when the monthly number was all over the map, and that the platform ecosystem question — Google AI Pro includes 2TB of Google One storage, Microsoft Copilot Pro bundles with Office 365 — has become a more important factor than the headline subscription price. Honestly I think this is the right outcome. I would not have written that sentence a year ago, and I want to put it somewhere I can find it.

I will reassess in three months. The last time I said that I was mostly bouncing between Cursor and Claude Code for coding and ChatGPT for everything else, and that is still roughly where I land. What has changed is that I now treat the twenty-dollar price point as the default filter rather than the headline, and I think that shift is going to age well. Give it six months and this could look very different again if the API price compression finally shows up at the consumer tier, but for now twenty dollars a month is the answer for almost every serious AI tool on the market and I am done pretending the price was ever the hard part.
