Get the latest crypto news, updates, and reports by subscribing to our free newsletter.
Giấy phép số 4978/GP-TTĐT do Sở Thông tin và Truyền thông Hà Nội cấp ngày 14 tháng 10 năm 2019 / Giấy phép SĐ, BS GP ICP số 2107/GP-TTĐT do Sở TTTT Hà Nội cấp ngày 13/7/2022.
© 2026 Index.vn
OpenAI has launched a new $100/month plan aimed at users who want to make heavier use of the company’s coding tools, positioning it between the $20/month Plus tier and the $200/month Pro plan. The new offering is designed to deliver more coding capacity per dollar, particularly during high-intensity sessions where usage limits can matter.
OpenAI confirmed that its four existing pricing tiers are: Free (with ads), Go at $8/month (with ads), Plus at $20/month (ad-free), and Pro at $200/month (ad-free). OpenAI also said the $200/month plan remains active even though it no longer appears on the company’s official pricing page.
OpenAI said the new $100 plan is intended to compete directly with Anthropic, which has offered a $100/month plan for Claude for some time. An OpenAI spokesperson stated that the $100 plan is designed to provide more coding capacity per dollar, especially in high-intensity work sessions where usage limits are a concern.
Both Plus ($20) and the new Pro ($100) target users who rely on Codex, the coding tool used with ChatGPT, on a daily basis. OpenAI said the $100 plan allows Codex usage at five times the level of the $20 plan.
OpenAI also emphasized that none of the plans offer unlimited usage. It said the $200/month plan provides limits up to 20 times higher than Plus, which it described as sufficient for the most demanding tasks, including when running multiple projects in parallel. The two Pro offerings are the same in features, with the usage limit being the primary difference.
During the early launch period, OpenAI temporarily expanded Codex usage limits on the $100 plan through May 31. After that date, limits may tighten, and early experiences should not be treated as long-term norms.
OpenAI said Codex usage is expanding rapidly. The company reported that more than 3 million people worldwide use Codex weekly, which it said is up fivefold over the last three months. It also reported monthly growth exceeding 70%.

Premium gym chains are entering a “golden era” that is ending or already in decline, as rising operating costs collide with shifting consumer preferences toward more flexible, community-based ways to exercise. Long-term memberships are shrinking, margins are pressured by higher rents and facility expenses, and competition from smaller, more personalized…