A draining credit meter beside ascending price tags and coins, illustrating usage-metered AI assistant pricing

Lindy AI Pricing (2026): Plans, Credits, and the Usage Meter

Lindy’s pricing changed completely in early 2026, and most articles about it are describing a product that no longer exists. The current lineup, live on lindy.ai/pricing: Plus at $49.99/month (“standard usage,” up to 2 inboxes), Pro at $99.99/month (“3x more usage,” 3 inboxes, computer use, model selection), Max at $199.99/month (“7x more usage,” 5 inboxes), and custom Enterprise. Billing is monthly only — no annual discount — and the old free plan is gone, replaced by a 7-day trial. The catch sits in the quotes: “standard usage” is a quota Lindy no longer publishes a number for, and by default your assistant simply pauses when you hit it.

Here’s each plan, how the two metering systems actually work, what happens at the limit, the costs that don’t appear on the pricing page, and how to decide whether the math works for you.


The plans (2026)

PlanPriceUsageInboxesNotable
Plus$49.99/mo”Standard usage”Up to 2Inbox triage, drafting, scheduling, meeting notes, iMessage/SMS
Pro$99.99/mo”3x more usage than Plus”Up to 3Adds computer use, model selection, a live onboarding session
Max$199.99/mo”7x more usage than Plus”Up to 5Everything in Pro, biggest quota
EnterpriseContact salesCustomCustomHIPAA + BAA, SSO/SCIM, audit logs, dedicated support

Three things worth noticing before the features:

  • The usage quota is opaque. Tiers are sold as “standard / 3x / 7x usage” with no published credit numbers. You find out what “standard” means by running into it.
  • Support on every individual tier is self-serve. Lindy’s own pricing docs state that Plus, Pro, and Max users get “the Lindy help center and community support” — dedicated support is an Enterprise feature.
  • There’s no annual option. A “save 17% annual” card appeared briefly during the early-2026 transition and was dropped; today it’s month-to-month only.

How the metering actually works

Lindy runs two parallel meters, documented separately in its billing docs:

1. “Usage” for the assistant. Every action the assistant takes draws down your plan. Lindy’s docs describe the draw qualitatively rather than numerically: email triage and meeting prep are “very low,” drafting replies and follow-ups are “low,” meeting recording and notes are “moderate,” and ad hoc research “varies” — with Lindy noting that usage warnings are most common on exactly those research tasks. Resource-heavy tasks can trigger a mid-task pause where Lindy asks whether to continue spending or stop.

2. Credits for custom agents. If you build agents with Lindy’s workflow builder, credits are consumed per task — “everything your agent does after being triggered,” including every condition, action, and message. Most tasks cost 1–3 credits on basic models and around 10 on large models, minimum 1. Four things inflate the bill: model intelligence, task complexity, “premium actions” (specialized integrations — no price list exists), and how long the agent runs while carrying context. Lindy’s own cost-control advice is to insert context-clearing steps and downgrade to cheaper models.

The practical consequence: you can see what a step cost only after it runs, and there is no published table to estimate from beforehand. As one Trustpilot reviewer put it in March 2026 after burning roughly 4,000 credits setting up four tasks: “The credits are black box. You have no idea how they get spent or how much a task will cost.”


What happens when you hit the limit

This part matters more than the tier prices:

  • Default: your assistant pauses until the next billing cycle. Paused tasks don’t automatically restart.
  • Overages are opt-in and cost 2x. Toggle on Overages in Settings → Billing and Lindy keeps working past your quota — at twice the regular credit rate.
  • You can’t buy a one-off top-up. Lindy’s docs are explicit that there’s no option to purchase extra credits; your choices are the 2x overage toggle or a higher tier.
  • Nothing rolls over. Unused quota expires monthly.

So the upgrade path under real load is $49.99 → $99.99 → $199.99, with 2x metering as the only relief valve in between. Billing surprises are the dominant theme in Lindy’s Trustpilot reviews (1.7/5 as of July 2026) — including one user charged $550 in overages against a low-tier subscription, and multiple reports of post-cancellation charges.


Costs that aren’t on the pricing page

  • Model surcharge. Large-model steps cost roughly 3–10x basic-model steps, and picking your model is itself gated to Pro and above.
  • Phone. Each phone number costs $10/month, and calls meter per minute on top (historically around 20 credits per minute for US calls). Call features are also tier-gated, with documented caps on lower plans.
  • Computer use (Lindy driving a cloud browser) requires Pro or above — and users report browser-automation tasks are among the most credit-hungry things Lindy does.
  • Premium actions are named in the credits doc as a cost multiplier but never enumerated or priced.

What changed in the 2026 repricing

Until early 2026, Lindy was priced as an agent-builder platform: a free plan with 400 credits/month, a $49.99 Pro tier commonly reported at 5,000 credits, and a $299 Business tier at 30,000 credits. Between January and March 2026 — alongside its relaunch as a consumer-facing AI executive assistant — Lindy replaced all of it with the Plus/Pro/Max lineup, dropped the free plan, dropped published credit numbers for the assistant tiers, and (its pricing page now leads with this) began anchoring against a “human assistant — $8,000/month.”

If you’re reading a “Lindy pricing” guide that mentions 400 free credits or a $299 Business plan, it predates the pivot. And note what the anchor implies: the honest comparison set for a $50–$200/month AI executive assistant isn’t a human EA — it’s the other AI assistants.


How the math compares

For the same inbox-and-calendar job, the relevant comparisons in 2026:

  • Carly starts at $35/month. Its agents each get a real email address and finish tasks end to end — replying to people, booking the meetings, updating your tools — rather than queueing drafts for approval. It connects to 200+ integrations across 40+ categories, and there’s a human support team behind it rather than a help center and a community forum. See Carly vs Lindy for the full comparison.
  • n8n charges per workflow execution (from €20/month cloud, free self-hosted) — dramatically cheaper for high-volume automation, but you build and maintain everything yourself.
  • Zapier starts around $19.99/month billed annually with per-task metering — cheap entry, expensive at volume, and judgment work needs its separately-metered Agents product.

The pattern to price against: Lindy’s meter charges for steps, so the more you actually rely on it, the faster you climb tiers. Lower-priced assistants with predictable bills win as reliance grows.


FAQ

Is there a free version of Lindy AI?

Not anymore. The 400-credit free plan was discontinued in the early-2026 repricing. Today you get a 7-day free trial (Lindy’s site says no credit card is required to start), then it’s $49.99/month minimum.

How much does Lindy AI cost per month?

$49.99 (Plus), $99.99 (Pro), or $199.99 (Max), billed monthly with no annual option, plus custom Enterprise pricing. Extras like phone numbers ($10/month each) and 2x overage billing can push the real number higher.

What happens when I run out of Lindy credits?

By default your assistant pauses until the next cycle. You can opt into overages at 2x the normal credit rate; there’s no way to buy a one-off credit pack, and unused credits don’t roll over.

Why did my Lindy usage go faster than expected?

Credits scale with step count, model size, premium actions, and how much context the agent carries. Meeting recording and ad hoc research are the heaviest documented categories, and per-step costs are only visible after the fact — which is why “black box” is the most common billing complaint in user reviews.

Is Lindy AI worth $49.99 a month?

If your usage is light and you’re comfortable approving drafts, possibly — see our full Lindy AI review for where it shines and where it breaks. If you want the work finished without a meter running, compare Carly, which starts at $35/month, or the wider field of Lindy alternatives.


Related: Lindy AI review · What is Lindy AI? · Carly vs Lindy · Lindy alternatives · Lindy vs n8n · Lindy vs Zapier

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