Install Codeium free before paying for anything else in this category. Unlimited AI code completion in 40+ editors at $0 — no cap, no trial period, no credit card. If free unlimited completion meets your needs, you don’t need to spend $20/mo on anything.
Need codebase-wide AI and Agent mode: Cursor AI · For JetBrains: GitHub Copilot
Codeium scores 7.4 because it solves the most important problem in this category first: it gives you unlimited AI code completion at $0. GitHub Copilot’s free tier caps at 2,000 completions a month. Codeium’s free tier has no cap, works in 40+ editors, and never expires. Every developer should install it before evaluating anything paid.
It scores 7.4 and not higher because it doesn’t match Cursor Pro on codebase-wide context or Agent mode. But Cursor costs $20/mo. At $0, Codeium is the clear starting point.
“GitHub Copilot charges $10/mo for what Codeium gives you free. If you’re paying for Copilot as an individual developer, you should be using Codeium instead.”
Honest caveat: Once you’ve used Codeium free and you’re hitting the limits of what completion alone can do, Cursor Pro at $20/mo is the right next step. Not before. After.
Individual developers never need to pay. The paid tiers exist for engineering teams that need centralised management, SSO, and usage analytics — not for individual use.
Individual developers never need to pay for Codeium. The free tier is the complete product for personal use.
When to consider paid: You’re managing Codeium across an engineering team and need SSO, centralised billing, usage reporting, and admin controls. That’s a team operations need, not an AI quality need. If you want better AI quality than Codeium free offers, the answer is Cursor Pro at $20/mo — not Codeium Teams.
Task 3 shows clearly where Codeium stops and Cursor starts. That boundary matters.
Full methodology →Accurate, context-aware completions that matched the component’s existing patterns — prop types, naming conventions, and style approach. No prompting required. Ran the same file through GitHub Copilot free and Codeium — completion quality was comparable, but Codeium had no monthly cap on how many completions it would provide. That distinction matters on the 20th working day of the month.
Correctly explained what the function did, identified its edge cases, and suggested two improvements — all from the current file context. For questions that stay within a single file, the chat is genuinely useful. For questions that require understanding how multiple files interact, the answers were less reliable than Cursor Pro on the same codebase.
No Agent mode. No multi-file planning. Codeium can complete code and answer questions about individual files, but it doesn’t plan or execute multi-file changes. This is not a bug — it’s a product scope decision. For multi-file refactors, you need Cursor AI’s Agent mode. Codeium is a completion tool, not an agent.
The defining feature. GitHub Copilot free gives you 2,000 completions a month. Codeium free gives you unlimited completions, forever, with no monthly reset. For developers who code heavily, the cap difference is not minor — it determines whether the tool is usable for your actual workflow or just for light use.
VS Code, all JetBrains IDEs, Vim, Neovim, Emacs, Sublime Text, Jupyter, and more. No other AI coding tool at any price covers this range. If you switch between editors or use non-mainstream tools, Codeium is the only option that follows you everywhere.
Install the extension, sign in once with Google or GitHub, and completions start working. No project setup, no configuration, no API keys. Under 2 minutes from decision to first completion. This is not a minor advantage — friction is the reason most developers never evaluate tools they might benefit from.
Completion quality is comparable to GitHub Copilot free on everyday tasks. Both understand the current file context well. Both handle autocomplete, function generation, and docstring writing reliably. The quality gap only appears on complex multi-file tasks — and for those, you need Cursor Pro regardless of which free tool you start with.
Codeium’s completions work within the current file and open tabs. It doesn’t index your entire project the way Cursor AI does. For large codebases where the AI needs to understand how files relate to each other, this is a real limitation. Windsurf (Codeium’s standalone IDE) has improved this, but it’s a separate product.
Codeium completes code and answers questions. It doesn’t plan or execute multi-file changes. If you want to describe a feature in plain English and have AI map out and implement the changes across multiple files, that’s Cursor AI’s Agent mode — not Codeium. These are different tools serving different needs.
GitHub Copilot is built into GitHub’s own platform — PR summaries, code review suggestions, and issue discussion assistance all work inside GitHub.com. Codeium doesn’t have this. If your workflow is heavily GitHub-native, Copilot’s integration is a genuine advantage.
GitHub Copilot and Cursor both have larger user bases and more community resources — tutorials, troubleshooting threads, integration guides. Codeium works well but if you hit an edge case, you’re less likely to find a documented solution than with the more established tools.
Start with Codeium free. Upgrade to Cursor Pro when you need more than completion. Use Copilot if GitHub integration matters. Use Tabnine only for enterprise data requirements.
The right next step once you’ve outgrown what completion alone can do. Codebase-wide indexing and Agent mode for multi-file changes. VS Code only. If you use Codeium free and find yourself wanting more project context, Cursor Pro at $20/mo is the answer.
Review →Better GitHub ecosystem integration and PR summaries inside GitHub.com. Free tier caps at 2,000 completions/month — Codeium free has no cap. If you don’t hit Copilot’s free limit, the tools are comparable. If you do hit it, Codeium wins on limits at the same price ($0).
Review →6 questions. A personalised stack based on your editor, workflow, and budget. No paid tool recommended unless it genuinely earns it.
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