Skip to main content

OpenAI could increase subscription prices to as much as $2,000 per month

a phone displaying the ChatGPT homepage on a beige bbackground.
Sanket Mishra / Pexels

OpenAI recently surpassed 1 million subscribers , each paying $20 (or more, for Teams and Enterprise), but that doesn’t seem to be enough to keep the company financially afloat given that hundreds of millions of people use the chatbot for free.

According to The Information , OpenAI is reportedly mulling over a massive rise in its subscription prices to as much as $2,000 per month for access to its latest and models, amid rumors of its potential bankruptcy.

Recommended Videos

Anyone can use OpenAI’s ChatGPT service for free; however, subscribers gain priority access to the AI model during times of peak usage, early access to new features, and the ability to create custom GPTs ( the company only recently wheeled out its Dall-E image generator from behind the paywall). Citing early internal discussions, The Information reports that OpenAI is reportedly considering hiking the price of access by a whopping 9,900%, however there is no official word yet on the reasoning for such a move. It is also unclear if that price increase would apply to the current ChatGPT service running on the GPT-4o model, or to the upcoming Strawberry and Orion models.

Between hardware procurement, data center infrastructure, energy and cooling, not to mention the cost of actually training a large language model, generative AI is an expensive business. OpenAI, arguably the standard bearer for the industry, reportedly has spent $7 billion on training its models (compared to just $1.5 billion on staffing), is projecting losses of $5 billion (with a “B”), and based on projections, could be filing for bankruptcy within the next year — though a recent round of funding from investors will likely delay the need for drastic financial action.

OpenAI is also facing increased competition from the rest of the generative AI field. Google and Anthropic continue to iterate more competent and capable chatbots while matching OpenAI’s current subscription pricing, and Apple Intelligence is expected to begin rolling out to mobile devices and the desktop next month. This news also comes as investors grow increasingly anxious about the amount of money companies like Google and Microsoft are sinking into AI technology without seeing a particularly strong path to profitability.

Andrew Tarantola
Former Computing Writer
Andrew Tarantola is a journalist with more than a decade reporting on emerging technologies ranging from robotics and machine…
ChatGPT models explained: How to use each, according to OpenAI
ChatGPT models list.

Although the entire AI boom was triggered by just one ChatGPT model, a lot has changed since 2022. New models have been released, old models have been replaced, updates roll out and roll back again when they go wrong -- the world of LLMs is pretty busy. At the moment, we have six OpenAI LLMs to choose from and, as both users and Sam Altman are aware, their names are completely useless.

Most people have probably just been using the newest model they can get their hands on, but it turns out that each of the six current models is good at different things -- and OpenAI has finally decided to tell us which model to use for which tasks.

Read more
It’s not your imagination — ChatGPT models actually do hallucinate more now
Deep Research option for ChatGPT.

OpenAI released a paper last week detailing various internal tests and findings about its o3 and o4-mini models. The main differences between these newer models and the first versions of ChatGPT we saw in 2023 are their advanced reasoning and multimodal capabilities. o3 and o4-mini can generate images, search the web, automate tasks, remember old conversations, and solve complex problems. However, it seems these improvements have also brought unexpected side effects.

What do the tests say?

Read more
ChatGPT’s awesome Deep Research gets a light version and goes free for all
Deep Research option for ChatGPT.

There’s a lot of AI hype floating around, and it seems every brand wants to cram it into their products. But there are a few remarkably useful tools, as well, though they are pretty expensive. ChatGPT’s Deep Research is one such feature, and it seems OpenAI is finally feeling a bit generous about it.

The company has created a lightweight version of Deep Research that is powered by its new o4-mini language model. OpenAI says this variant is “more cost-efficient while preserving high quality.” More importantly, it is available to use for free without any subscription caveat.

Read more