HomeBest for CodingGitHub Copilot
Ranked #3 · Best for CodingFree tierPro $10/mo

GitHub Copilot

The most widely used AI assistant — now agentic, multi-model, and woven through the entire GitHub workflow.

8.3
BlipRadar Score
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How it scores
Last reviewed 7 June 2026
Output quality
8.0
Value for money
8.5
Ease of use
9.0
Reliability
8.5
Ecosystem
9.5
Momentum
7.0
Weighted total 8.3 / 10 · scored on blipradar's public rubric. How we score →
The verdict

GitHub Copilot is the most widely adopted AI coding assistant — built by GitHub (Microsoft) and woven directly into the editor and the entire GitHub workflow.

  • Started the category in 2021 and remains the default for millions of developers.
  • Far more than autocomplete now — chat, agent mode and a fully autonomous coding agent.
  • Multi-model — routes across OpenAI, Anthropic (Claude) and Google models, picked per task.
  • Lives where you already work — VS Code, JetBrains, Visual Studio, the CLI and GitHub.com.
Bottom line: not the single best at any one thing, but unmatched if your team already lives in GitHub.

Copilot spans a ladder of autonomy, from a single line of code to a whole pull request opened for you.

  • Code completions — fast, unlimited inline suggestions on every paid plan.
  • Agent mode — multi-step edits across files, now generally available in both VS Code and JetBrains.
  • Coding agent — assign it a GitHub Issue and it branches, writes code, runs tests and opens a PR asynchronously.
  • Copilot code review — automated PR review that flags issues like a thorough senior dev.
  • GitHub Spark — describe an app in plain English and get a working prototype (Pro+ and Enterprise).

Copilot is model-flexible and tuned for the GitHub ecosystem rather than any single vendor.

  • Choose your model — a fast default plus premium options like Claude Opus, OpenAI’s o-series and Gemini.
  • Repo-aware — it uses your repository, issues and PRs as grounding context.
  • Same context everywhere — editor, GitHub.com, Jira, Slack and Linear share one auth and repo context.
  • Premium requests — chat, agent mode, review and premium models draw from a monthly request allowance.

The widest range of plans in the category, from a genuinely useful free tier to per-seat enterprise. Pro has annual billing (~$100/yr).

Free2,000 completions + 50 premium requests/moFree
Prounlimited completions, 300 premium requests$10/mo
Pro+1,500 requests, top premium models$39/mo
Businessteam admin, policy & audit controls$19/seat
Enterpriseorg-wide, codebase customization$39/seat
Premium requests are the thing to watch — chat, agent mode and premium models all draw from your monthly allowance, with overage billed per request.

Copilot is the safe default for teams standardized on GitHub — and a strong free option for everyone else.

Great fit
  • Teams already living in GitHub, VS Code or JetBrains.
  • Developers who want one assistant across editor, web, review and CI.
  • Anyone wanting a capable free tier to start with.
Think twice if
  • You want the absolute best raw agent on the hardest tasks — dedicated agents edge ahead.
  • You dislike metered ‘premium request’ accounting.

No tool is perfect — the main trade-offs to weigh:

  • Jack of all trades — rarely the single best tool at any one capability.
  • Premium-request model — usage accounting and overage can get fiddly.
  • Capability gap — raw agent quality trails dedicated agents on the hardest tasks.
  • Maturing surfaces — the coding agent and Spark are newer and still evolving.
Even so — for teams on GitHub, the shared auth, repo context and billing usually outweigh the per-feature gaps.

Strengths

  • Deepest, most native GitHub and IDE integration in the category
  • Multi-model: Claude, OpenAI and Gemini, chosen per task
  • Full autonomy ladder: completions → agent mode → autonomous coding agent
  • Genuinely useful free tier; the lowest paid entry price ($10)
  • Used by millions — huge community and documentation

Trade-offs

  • Rarely the single best at any one capability
  • Premium-request allowances and overage add complexity
  • Raw agent quality trails dedicated agents on the hardest tasks
  • Some newer features are still maturing
What users say
Loved: GitHub integrationLoved: free tierLoved: model choiceGripe: premium requestsGripe: not best-in-class

On Reddit, G2 and developer forums, Copilot is praised as the dependable default — it’s everywhere developers already work, the free tier is generous, and multi-model choice is popular. The recurring gripes are the ‘premium request’ accounting and a sense that dedicated agents now beat it on the hardest tasks. For teams standardized on GitHub, reviewers consistently say the integration is worth it.

Summary written by blipradar from public discussion — we link out rather than republish others' reviews.
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