'What a Joke': GitHub Copilot's Token-Billing Switch Ignites Developer Revolt Over 10x–50x Cost Spikes
TechCrunch reported May 30 that GitHub Copilot's switch from flat-rate subscriptions to token-based billing, effective June 1, has spurred consternation among developers — with one summing it up as 'what a joke.' Under t.
At a glance
- GitHub Copilot moved from flat subscriptions to token-based billing effective June 1, 2026
- One developer estimated costs ballooning from about $29 per month to nearly $750 per month
- Reported cost increases ranged from 10x to 50x, with some bills projected above $3,000 monthly
- GitHub attributed the change to compute demands of agentic, multi-step coding sessions
- Backlash spread across Reddit and X ahead of the June 1 cutover
VERDICT — CONFIRMED
TechCrunch reported May 30 that GitHub Copilot's switch from flat-rate subscriptions to token-based billing, effective June 1, has spurred consternation among developers — with one summing it up as 'what a joke.' Under the new model, users are charged based on how many tokens they burn through instead of a low flat rate based on requests. One Redditor claimed that while they currently pay around $29 per month, the new rates would balloon their costs to nearly $750 a month; developers on Reddit and X reported increases ranging from 10x to 50x, and some estimates showed bills rising from under $50 to over $3,000 monthly for heavy users.
GitHub frames the change as a response to the growing compute demands of Copilot's newer agentic capabilities, arguing the prior pricing no longer reflected actual usage patterns as developers increasingly rely on resource-intensive multi-step coding sessions. Some Copilot users critiqued the backlash, contending that developers who know what they are doing should not blow through so many tokens and attributing the loudest complaints to 'vibe-coders.' TechCrunch concluded that 'the golden age of Microsoft's GitHub Copilot appears to be at an end — for the little guy, at least.'
Why it matters
the first major repricing of a mass-market agentic coding assistant signals that subsidized flat-rate access to frontier coding models is ending, shifting true inference costs onto developers and resetting economics across the AI tooling market.
Key facts on file
- GitHub Copilot moved from flat subscriptions to token-based billing effective June 1, 2026
- One developer estimated costs ballooning from about $29 per month to nearly $750 per month
- Reported cost increases ranged from 10x to 50x, with some bills projected above $3,000 monthly
- GitHub attributed the change to compute demands of agentic, multi-step coding sessions
- Backlash spread across Reddit and X ahead of the June 1 cutover


