This week, we will be updating Devin’s self-serve pricing.
We’re retiring the old Core and Team plans and introducing a new lineup: Free, Pro, Max, Teams, and Enterprise. We’re also beginning to charge for products that have been free until now, including Ask Devin, DeepWiki, and Devin Review.
We want to be direct about what this means.
For many teams, this lowers the barrier to adopt Devin by replacing the old $500/month Team entry point with more flexible options. For some lighter Core users, the removal of the old no-minimum Core plan is a real change. And for products that have been free until now, pricing will now reflect the real compute they use.
We think this is the right long-term direction for two reasons: it gives customers a clearer path from trying Devin to using it regularly, and it lets us keep investing in products that are genuinely expensive to run.
Our new self-serve plan lineup is:
At a high level:
As part of this change, the old Core and Team plans will go away. And there is one other change: for self-serve customers, usage that is included in your plan will count against quota. If you go beyond your included quota, additional usage will be priced and billed in dollars rather than ACUs. Enterprise billing will continue to use ACUs
If you’re on Core today, you’ll move to Free.
Free remains free, but it does not preserve the old no-minimum pay-as-you-go structure. If you want ongoing paid usage beyond Free, you’ll move to one of the new paid plans.
That is an important change, and we want to say it plainly: for some lighter Core users, this will be a higher-commitment starting point than before. At the same time, many active Core users already use Devin enough that one of the new paid plans should better match how they use the product today.
If you’re on Team today, you’ll move to Teams. The new Teams plan lowers the entry point relative to the old $500/month Team plan and gives teams a simpler path to adopt Devin with shared billing and collaboration built in.
If you’re on Enterprise, there is no change to your agreement as part of this update.
We’ve offered several newer products for free or in preview while we learned how people use them. Going forward, that will change.
We’ll begin charging for:
These products do substantial work on your behalf, and in each case their cost depends on how much model usage they consume. We want pricing to reflect that more clearly. For self-serve customers, usage that is included in your plan will count against quota. Usage beyond included quota will be priced in dollars based on the underlying model cost of each run. For enterprise customers, these products will continue to be billed through ACUs.
The goal here is not just to offset cost. It’s also to give customers better control over when these products run, and better visibility into what they cost.
We want this rollout to be predictable. That means we are pairing pricing changes with better controls and clearer cost guidance inside the product.
Ask Devin will move to usage-based billing. Conceptually, Ask Devin is doing agent work on your behalf, and we want its pricing to work the same way as Devin usage: when you use more, you pay more.
Devin Review has been in a temporary free preview. We’re now introducing a 2-week free trial for Devin Review, and reviews after the trial will move to usage-based billing. As we begin billing for it, we’ll also add better controls for when reviews run. Similar to DeepWiki, Devin Review for open source repos will remain free.
We expect a typical review run to cost around $2–$3, and we want customers to have much better control over when those runs happen. Instead of a one-size-fits-all “run on every commit”, as many users are doing today, Devin Review will support options like:
That matters because we do not want review costs to feel open-ended or hard to reason about. If Devin is going to run work automatically, customers should be able to decide how often that happens. Customers who currently have “run on every commit” turned on will be migrated to “run when a PR is first opened”.
DeepWiki and deepwiki.com will remain free with the existing generation experience.
Going forward, we’ll also offer higher quality and more expensive generation options that will be subject to usage-based billing. These use stronger models and deeper thinking to create more detailed, more comprehensive wikis. You’ll be able to choose the mode that fits the job.
There are three reasons for this update.
First, we want a clearer self-serve path for Devin. The old Core and Team structure left too much distance between trying the product and adopting it more seriously. The new lineup gives customers a more gradual path from Free to Pro to Max to Teams. It also makes self-serve pricing easier to understand: included usage is part of your plan, and extra usage beyond that is shown directly in dollars.
Second, we want to lower the barrier for teams. The old Team plan’s $500/month entry point was too high for many teams that wanted to use Devin regularly but were not ready to start there.
Third, we need pricing for compute-heavy products to reflect the real work they do. Ask Devin, DeepWiki, and Devin Review all consume meaningful resources. Charging for them lets us keep improving them, while also giving us a much better signal about which workflows customers truly value.