Augment Code

by Augment Code

Freemium

AI coding assistant for professional software teams. Provides context-aware code completions, chat, and agentic coding with deep understanding of large codebases. Supports VS Code and JetBrains IDEs.

4.2
out of 5.0 · 8+ reviews
Category Coding
Platform macOSWindowsLinux
Last Updated March 22, 2026

Overview

Augment Code is an AI coding platform designed for development teams managing large codebases. Its Context Engine processes over 100,000 files simultaneously, building semantic understanding of function signatures, class hierarchies, API contracts, and architectural patterns for highly accurate suggestions.

The platform features the Auggie agent — which achieved a 51.8% solve rate on SWE-bench Pro, the highest among all AI coding agents. Available as IDE extensions for VS Code and JetBrains, CLI tools, GitHub-integrated code review, and Slack integration. Augment operates on a credit-based pricing model where different AI models consume credits based on complexity.

Pricing

Indie
$20 /mo
  • 40,000 credits/month, up to 1 user
  • Includes Context Engine, MCP & Native Tools, SOC 2 Type II compliance
Standard
$60 /mo
  • 130,000 credits/month, up to 20 users
  • Team features including code review and PR summaries
Max
$200 /mo
  • 450,000 credits/month, up to 20 users
  • Auto top-up available at $15 per 24,000 credits
Enterprise
Custom pricing
  • Custom credit allocations, unlimited users, dedicated support with SLA, SSO/OIDC/SCIM, analytics API

Pros & Cons

Pros

Context Engine processes 100,000+ files, understanding entire project architecture for accurate suggestions
Auggie agent achieved 51.8% solve rate on SWE-bench Pro — highest among all AI coding agents
Automatic test generation and bug detection reduce QA time before human review
Seamless integration with VS Code, JetBrains, GitHub, and Slack fits existing workflows
SOC 2 Type II compliance included even on the Indie plan for security-conscious teams

Cons

Credit-based pricing is unpredictable compared to flat-rate competitors like GitHub Copilot
No free tier creates a barrier to evaluation that other tools avoid with generous trials
Smaller community than GitHub Copilot means fewer tutorials and shared workflows
Can struggle with niche libraries and frameworks outside mainstream ecosystems
Standard and Max plans cap at 20 users — larger teams must negotiate Enterprise pricing

Reviews