GitHub has paused new sign-ups for its Copilot Pro, Pro+, and Student plans, citing cost issues linked to agentic coding workflows. The change, effective 20 April, positions Copilot Free as the only individual plan accepting new users.
Joe Binder, GitHub’s VP of product, indicated that these workflows now consume more compute resources than users’ monthly payments cover. “It’s now common for a handful of requests to incur costs that exceed the plan price,” Binder said.
Existing users can maintain access to their current plans and have the option to upgrade, but GitHub has not provided a timeline for resuming new subscription offers. Pro and Pro+ subscribers can cancel between 20 April and 20 May to receive a refund, with no charge for April.
The pause leads to tighter session and weekly token limits across individual plans, encouraging users to transition to the Pro+ tier. Pro+, priced at $39 per month, now offers over five times the limits of the $10 Pro plan.
Usage warnings will be integrated into VS Code and the Copilot CLI to inform developers before they reach set limits. GitHub is also revising model access; Opus models, the most capable AI models, are being removed from the Pro plan. Opus 4.7 will remain available on Pro+, while Opus 4.5 and 4.6 will be removed altogether from both tiers.
This shifting landscape reflects a larger trend where agentic coding sessions generate unpredictable computing demands. Repository features causing additional costs, such as the ability to run multiple parallel workflows, are also being restricted.
Prior to this announcement, GitHub had suspended Copilot Pro free trials due to abuse, indicating underlying capacity pressures. The timing of the pause coincides with backlash over Copilot’s insertion of promotional content into pull requests, which was disabled, affecting over 11,000 requests.
Analysts suggest that GitHub’s adjustments may prompt developers to view AI tools as limited resources. Faisal Kawoosa of Techarc noted a likely trend of more differentiated pricing structures as user demand evolves, maintaining GitHub’s considerable leverage in the developer market.
As competitors assess the situation, there is uncertainty regarding their ability to attract affected Copilot users prior to potential changes in GitHub’s pricing strategies. “Cost structures built for lightweight assistance no longer hold,” said Charlie Dai, a Forrester analyst, emphasizing the potential for more capacity rationing across the industry.





