GitHub Copilot Overhauls Individual Plans with Flexible Credit System and Premium 'Max' Tier

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GitHub Copilot Overhauls Individual Plans with Flexible Credit System and Premium 'Max' Tier

June 1, 2026 — GitHub is dramatically restructuring its Copilot individual subscription lineup, introducing a flexible credit allotment system and a new Max plan designed for sustained, high-volume AI-assisted coding. The changes, effective June 1, 2026, come in response to user feedback about the sufficiency of included usage under the previously announced usage-based billing model.

GitHub Copilot Overhauls Individual Plans with Flexible Credit System and Premium 'Max' Tier
Source: github.blog

Under the new system, Pro and Pro+ plans will include more total usage at the same monthly price. The Max plan, priced at $100/month, offers $200 in total included usage. All paid plans will now feature a two-part usage allowance: a fixed base credits component and a variable flex allotment that can adapt over time.

“We’ve heard your questions about whether the included usage in each GitHub Copilot plan will go far enough,” a GitHub spokesperson said. “Longer agent runs, multi-step work, and more capable models will all put pressure on the usage amounts. Our new flex allotment is designed to adapt as the economics of AI evolve.”

Plans at a Glance

As of June 1, 2026, the individual Copilot lineup spans four tiers:

  • Free: Limited code completions, limited chat and agent usage with auto mode.
  • Pro ($10/month): $10 base credits + $5 flex allotment = $15 total included usage.
  • Pro+ ($39/month): $39 base credits + $31 flex allotment = $70 total included usage.
  • Max ($100/month): $100 base credits + $100 flex allotment = $200 total included usage.

Code completions and next-edit suggestions remain unlimited on paid plans and do not consume credits.

How Usage-Based Billing Works

Base credits are consumed first. Once depleted, the flex allotment is applied automatically—no manual intervention required. All usage is tracked at the same rates across the IDE, github.com, and CLI. Users can monitor available credits and consumption via their dashboard. If a plan’s total included usage is exhausted, additional credits can be purchased on demand.

“The flex allotment is a variable part of your included usage; it is designed to adapt as the economics of AI evolve, including model pricing, new models, and improvements in efficiency,” the spokesperson added. “Your base credits, which are 1:1 to your subscription price, will always stay the same.”

GitHub Copilot Overhauls Individual Plans with Flexible Credit System and Premium 'Max' Tier
Source: github.blog

Background

GitHub initially announced a transition to usage-based billing for Copilot individual plans earlier this year, but user feedback raised concerns about whether the proposed included usage amounts would be adequate for modern workflows—especially those involving long-running agents, multi-step tasks, and more powerful AI models. The updated structure introduces the flex allotment as a buffer that can increase over time without raising subscription prices.

The Max plan is a new entrant, targeting developers who require sustained, high-volume Copilot usage. The $100/month tier provides double the base credits of Pro+ and a larger proportional flex allotment.

What This Means for Developers

For current monthly Pro and Pro+ subscribers, no action is required. The additional flex usage will land automatically on June 1 when accounts migrate to usage-based billing. The new plans signal that GitHub is listening to power users and expects AI coding costs to fluctuate—with the flex system absorbing some of that volatility.

Industry analysts note that the variable flex allotment could become a competitive advantage. “By tying part of the included usage to evolving model economics, GitHub shields developers from sudden price shocks while also encouraging efficient AI use,” said a tech industry observer. The move also positions Copilot against rivals like Amazon CodeWhisperer and Microsoft’s own Azure-based offerings.

For more information, see the official GitHub Copilot documentation.

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