GitHub Copilot shifts to usage-based pricing June 1 - why that's no surprise
GitHub Copilot is ditching its premium request unit system for usage-based billing, a move that's been expected due to the rising costs of AI services.

The bill's finally coming due for AI services. GitHub announced that as of June 1, 2026, all GitHub Copilot plans will shift to usage-based billing. This radical change from its current premium request unit (PRU) system means users will consume monthly allotments of GitHub AI Credits based on token consumption, including input, output, and cached tokens at published API rates.
Smart people saw this coming. A week ago, GitHub blocked users from getting a new GitHub Copilot subscription. GitHub also began restricting the models available from its individual subscription plans, while dropping access to Opus models entirely.
Price increases were clearly on their way. According to GitHub, it's no longer the same service. What was once a smart programming editor has evolved into "an agentic platform capable of running long, multi-step coding sessions, using the latest models, and iterating across entire repositories." On top of that, "Agentic usage is becoming the default, and it brings significantly higher compute and inference demands." GitHub claims its current premium request model is unsustainable.
After all, they stated, "a quick chat question and a multi-hour autonomous coding session can cost the user the same amount," with GitHub absorbing escalating inference costs. The usage-based model is intended to maintain long-term service reliability. The good news is that, for now, anyway, base subscription prices remain unchanged.
Copilot Pro is staying at $10 per month, and Pro+ is at $39 per month. However, these subscriptions will now include monthly AI Credits matching their dollar value. Code completions and Next Edit suggestions will remain included without consuming AI Credits.
Users on annual plans will continue with PRU-based pricing until expiration, when they transition to Copilot Free with upgrade options, or they can convert early to monthly plans with prorated credits. Copilot Business, $19 per user per month, and Copilot Enterprise. $39 per user per month, maintain their current pricing while adding equivalent monthly AI Credits per seat.
However, and this is important, in the past, when you ran out of PRUs, you simply downshifted to a less capable model. With the new AI Credits approach, when you're out of Credits, you're out of luck. If you want to keep working, you'll need to pay more for Credits.
Many users aren't waiting to dismiss this new pricing plan as a bad deal. As one Reddit poster put it, "I don't see companies going to be all happy if they get a 50x larger bill. People really underestimate how many tokens they use." For all the grumbling, though, it's not like the news is surprising.
People who paid attention to AI's growing costs -- memory is more expensive than ever, and gigawatt datacenters don't build themselves -- knew this was coming. Other companies have already started to hike their rates. For example, OpenAI increased the cost for developers using its flagship GPT-5.2 model from $1.25 per input token in the previous GPT-5.1 to $5.75.
Source: ZDNet