The AI subscription wars just got a whole lot more interesting. OpenAI slashed its Pro pricing in half, and the coding community is buzzing.
Wait, Didn’t ChatGPT Pro Already Exist?
Yes. Yes, it did. But here’s the twist — OpenAI just launched a second Pro plan, and this one costs $100 a month. That’s half the price of the original $200 Pro tier that’s been sitting at the top of the pricing ladder since late 2024.
So now there are two Pro plans. Confusing? A little. Exciting? Absolutely.
The new $100 tier slots neatly between the $20 Plus plan and the $200 Pro plan. Think of it as the Goldilocks option — not too cheap, not too expensive, just right for the developer who lives inside their code editor. OpenAI confirmed the move via a post on X on April 9, 2026, and the internet immediately had thoughts.
So What Do You Actually Get for $100?

Let’s get into the good stuff. The new $100 Pro plan is built around Codex — OpenAI’s AI-powered coding assistant. And it delivers five times more Codex usage than the $20 Plus plan.
That’s not a small bump. That’s a massive leap.
OpenAI says the new tier is “best for longer, high-effort Codex sessions.” In plain English? If you’re the kind of developer who spends hours debugging, refactoring, and building complex systems with AI assistance, this plan was made for you.
Here’s a quick breakdown of what you’re getting:
- 5x more Codex usage than the Plus plan
- Access to all Pro features, including advanced reasoning models
- Unlimited file uploads
- Maximum deep research and agent mode
- Extended projects, tasks, and custom GPTs
- Experimental preview of new features before they roll out widely
And here’s a sweet bonus — OpenAI is offering double the Codex limits through May 31 as a limited-time incentive. That means early subscribers get 10x the Codex usage of Plus users. Not bad for a launch deal.
According to The Verge, OpenAI described the Plus plan as “the best offer at $20 for steady, day-to-day usage of Codex,” while the new $100 tier is “a more accessible upgrade path for heavier daily use.” Translation: if you’re a power user, it’s time to upgrade.
The Full ChatGPT Subscription Lineup (Yes, There Are Five Tiers Now)

Before this announcement, ChatGPT had four personal subscription options. Now there are five. Here’s the full picture:
- Free — Basic access, limited features
- Go — $8/month, ad-supported
- Plus — $20/month, no ads, solid everyday usage
- Pro (New) — $100/month, 5x Codex, heavy daily use
- Pro (Original) — $200/month, 20x Codex, maximum capacity
The $200 Pro plan still exists. It offers four times the Codex of the new $100 plan — so 20x compared to Plus. But here’s the interesting part: The Decoder noted that the $200 tier is no longer listed on the main pricing page. OpenAI calls it the “highest usage option for those who need even greater capacity,” but it’s quietly fading into the background.
Is OpenAI phasing it out? Nobody’s saying that officially. But the writing might be on the wall.
This Is Clearly About Anthropic — Let’s Be Honest
OpenAI didn’t launch this plan in a vacuum. The timing is deliberate. The pricing is deliberate. Everything about this move screams one thing: Claude Code.
Anthropic’s Claude Code has been on an absolute tear. The tool launched publicly in May 2025, and by February 2026, its run-rate revenue had already surpassed $2.5 billion — more than doubling since the start of the year, according to CNBC. Developers love it. The AI community can’t stop talking about it. At industry events, people are calling it “Claude mania.”
Anthropic runs a similar subscription model with four tiers. Their top two — Max 5x at $100/month and Max 20x at $200/month — are specifically designed for heavy Claude Code users. Sound familiar?
OpenAI’s new $100 Pro plan matches Anthropic’s Max 5x tier dollar for dollar. And OpenAI isn’t shy about the competition. An OpenAI spokesperson told TechCrunch: “Compared with Claude Code, Codex delivers more coding capacity per dollar across paid tiers.”
That’s a direct shot. OpenAI is not playing defense here — they’re going on offense.
Codex Has Been Growing Fast — Really Fast
Here’s some context that makes this move make even more sense. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman posted on X that Codex had reached three million weekly users. He also announced that the company would reset usage limits every million users until the platform hits 10 million.
That’s a growth strategy and a marketing move rolled into one. OpenAI is essentially saying: we’re scaling fast, and we want you along for the ride.
Codex first launched in April 2025 and became widely available in October. In February 2026, OpenAI launched a standalone Codex app for Apple computers, pushing even harder into the developer market. Then came GPT-5.2 and GPT-5.3-Codex, which Engadget noted “significantly boosted the speed and reasoning capabilities of Codex.” Suddenly, developers had a real choice between ChatGPT and Claude Opus.
The only problem? The $200 price tag was a dealbreaker for many. The new $100 plan removes that friction entirely.
Developers Had Been Asking for This
This wasn’t just OpenAI’s idea. Users had been loudly requesting a middle-tier plan for months. Posts on OpenAI’s developer community forums made it clear: people wanted more Codex without paying $200 a month.
OpenAI listened. And they delivered.
The community response has been largely positive. Developers who felt priced out of the Pro tier now have a real option. And the limited-time bonus — 10x Codex through May 31 — gives early adopters a compelling reason to jump in now rather than wait.
What This Means for the AI Subscription Wars
The AI industry is moving fast. Pricing strategies are shifting. And the competition between OpenAI and Anthropic is heating up in ways that directly benefit users.
Think about it: a year ago, serious AI coding tools cost $200 a month at the top tier. Now you can get a robust, high-usage plan for half that price. That’s the market working in real time.
The Decoder pointed out that OpenAI’s new pricing “significantly undercuts Pro-level offerings from Anthropic and Google, which start at $200 and up.” That’s a bold claim — and it’s backed by the numbers.
Google is also in this race. The AI coding assistant market is no longer a two-horse competition. But right now, the loudest battle is between OpenAI’s Codex and Anthropic’s Claude Code. And with this pricing move, OpenAI just fired a very loud shot.
Should You Upgrade?

Here’s the honest answer: it depends on how you use Codex.
If you’re a casual user who dips into AI coding help a few times a week, the $20 Plus plan is still your best bet. OpenAI says so themselves.
But if you’re a developer who runs long, complex Codex sessions daily — building features, debugging systems, writing tests, refactoring entire codebases — the new $100 Pro plan is a serious upgrade worth considering. You get five times the usage, all the Pro features, and a limited-time bonus that makes the first few months even more valuable.
And if you need the absolute maximum? The $200 plan still exists, quietly, for those who need it.
The bottom line: OpenAI just made its AI coding tools more accessible. That’s good for developers. That’s good for the industry. And it’s going to keep the pressure on Anthropic to keep innovating.
The AI subscription wars are far from over. In fact, they’re just getting started.
Sources
- The Verge — ChatGPT has a new $100 per month Pro subscription
- The Decoder — OpenAI halves its Pro price to $100 for heavy Codex users
- HNGN — ChatGPT’s New Pro Plan Offers $100/Month Subscription
- CNBC — OpenAI looks to take on Anthropic with $100 per month ChatGPT Pro subscriptions
- Engadget — OpenAI has a new $100 ChatGPT Pro plan to better match up with Claude







