Gitpod Classic pay-as-you-go shut down on October 15, 2025 and the company rebranded to Ona with a pivot toward AI agent orchestration; gitpod.io now redirects to ona.com, and the legacy $9/mo Personal flat-rate tier is gone. Ona Core starts at $20/mo with credit-based OCU billing (80 to 2,200 OCUs depending on tier within Core), Free tier offers a one-time $10 of usage (40 OCUs), and the self-hosted Ona Flex replacement initially supports only AWS. The interesting question for most subscribers is rarely whether to pay the new Core rate but where the actual workflow lever sits: a managed cloud dev environment that 'just works' (Codespaces if the code lives on GitHub, CodeSandbox if browser-collaborative coding is the actual pattern), local development with AI completion (Copilot at the cheapest pure-AI rate in this set), or a deep professional IDE for the languages and frameworks JetBrains specializes in. Three exit cohorts dominate this page: GitHub-centric developers whose devcontainer.json transfers cleanly to Codespaces; subscribers whose cloud-dev preference was actually about browser-collaborative coding rather than full project work; and developers who realize their cloud-dev usage was driven by AI completion access and want to optimize for that locally.
Where alternatives win
GitHub Codespaces is the most direct cloud-dev replacement when code already lives on GitHub; pay-as-you-go pricing scales with usage, the free tier covers 60 hours per month on a 2-core machine, and devcontainer.json migrates with minimal config changes.
CodeSandbox Pro is the cheapest managed flat-rate cloud-dev path in this set, with browser-collaborative editing purpose-built for frontend and JavaScript work and a free tier that covers public sandboxes plus unlimited Devboxes.
GitHub Copilot Pro is the right pick when the actual lever was AI completion rather than the cloud workspace; runs in VS Code, JetBrains, and Neovim locally at well under Codespaces sustained-use cost on a typical 8-hour workday.
JetBrains Individual Tool at the single-IDE rate or All Products Pack at the polyglot rate covers Java, Kotlin, .NET, Ruby, and Go work that VS Code and Zed do not match in refactoring depth, with Gateway available for remote development if cloud-friendly aspects still matter.
By Subrupt EditorialPublished Reviewed
Gitpod pioneered the cloud development environment category in 2018 from Germany, and for years Personal at the legacy $9/mo flat-rate covered unlimited cloud-dev hours with VS Code or JetBrains in browser. That product is gone. Gitpod Classic pay-as-you-go shut down on October 15, 2025; the company rebranded to Ona, gitpod.io now redirects to ona.com, and the new Ona Core tier starts at $20/mo with OCU credit-based billing rather than flat-rate hours. The self-hosted replacement, Ona Flex, supports only AWS at launch. Most subscribers landing here are not weighing a price comparison; they are weighing migration paths because the product they paid for no longer exists.
Each pick covers a distinct exit lane. GitHub Codespaces takes GitHub-centric developers whose devcontainer.json transfers cleanly and whose monthly hours sit comfortably under the per-hour pricing curve. CodeSandbox takes subscribers whose actual cloud-dev workload was browser-collaborative coding rather than full project work, at the cheapest managed flat-rate in this set. GitHub Copilot takes developers who realize the cloud-workspace preference was downstream of AI completion access and want to run that locally with VS Code or JetBrains. JetBrains takes developers whose stack benefits from deep refactoring and language analysis the free editors do not match, with Gateway available if any cloud-friendly remote pattern is still doing work.
Ona Core stops being worth its rate when the OCU credit math runs above the legacy Personal cost on typical use, when GitHub Codespaces covers the same workflow at pay-as-you-go on a code base that already lives on GitHub, when the actual cloud-dev pattern was browser-collaborative experimentation that CodeSandbox Pro covers at less than half Core's entry rate, when local development plus Copilot delivers the AI completion lever at the cheapest pure-AI rate in this set, or when the lost flat-rate is forcing a deeper question about whether a professional local IDE was the right tool all along.
Match the pick to the exit reason. GitHub-native cloud dev with devcontainer.json continuity equals Codespaces. Browser-collaborative coding at the cheapest managed flat-rate equals CodeSandbox. Local IDE plus AI completion as the actual lever equals Copilot. Deep professional refactoring for Java, Kotlin, .NET, or Go equals JetBrains.
Affiliate disclosure: Subrupt earns a commission when you switch to a service through our recommendation links. This never changes the price you pay. We only recommend services where there's a real cost or feature advantage for you, and our picks are based on the data on this page, not on which programs pay the most.
Quick pick by use case
If you only have thirty seconds, find your situation below and skip to that pick.
Codespaces is the most direct migration path when the repo already lives on GitHub; the free tier covers 60 hours per month on a 2-core machine and devcontainer.json transfers with minimal changes.
Best managed flat-rate cloud dev for browser-collaborative coding
CodeSandbox Pro at $9/mo runs at less than half Ona Core's entry rate with the cleanest browser-collaboration UX in this set and a free tier that covers public sandboxes plus unlimited Devboxes.
Copilot Pro at $10/mo runs in any local IDE with the strongest completion quality; total monthly cost lands at the cheapest pure-AI rate in this set when paired with VS Code or Zed.
JetBrains Individual Tool covers a single flagship IDE with refactoring and language analysis that VS Code and Zed do not match, with Gateway available for remote dev if any cloud-friendly pattern is still doing real work.
Skip these picks if: Stay with Ona Core if the new AI agent orchestration is genuinely doing real work for your engineering org, if your devcontainer.json setup is so deeply tied to Gitpod prebuilds that the migration cost runs above several months of Core, or if your team has the AWS infrastructure budget and headcount to run Ona Flex self-hosted at scale.
At a glance: Gitpod alternatives
Quick comparison across pricing floor, best fit, and switching effort. Tap a row to jump to the full pick.
Standard (100 hr/mo)100 Monthly subscription cost (USD)
Heavy (176 hr/mo)176 Monthly subscription cost (USD)
GitHub Codespaces
Free
$7/mo
$32/mo
CodeSandbox
$9/mo
$9/mo
$9/mo
GitHub Copilot
$10/mo
$10/mo
$10/mo
JetBrains
$17/mo
$17/mo
$17/mo
Modeled at three typical solo-developer use levels. Light use is 30 hours per month of cloud dev or equivalent. Standard use is 100 hours per month (about 25 hours per week). Heavy use is 176 hours per month (8 hours per day, 22 working days). Codespaces priced at the 2-core $0.18/hr rate with the 60-hour free tier subtracted at light and standard use. CodeSandbox Pro at $9/mo flat-rate (compute credits assumed within the 40/mo budget). Copilot Pro at $10/mo flat-rate (no cloud-dev cost; assumes a free local editor). JetBrains Individual Tool at $16.90/mo flat-rate (no cloud-dev cost; assumes a local install). Ona Core entry at $20/mo is shown for reference at all three levels.
GitHub Codespaces is what Gitpod Classic would look like if it had been built and operated by the company that already owns most of the world's source code.
The trade: GitHub-only is the constraint, so GitLab and Bitbucket repos are out of scope entirely. Pay-as-you-go pricing climbs with sustained use; a developer running Codespaces 8 hours per day for 22 days lands above $30/mo on the 2-core rate, and bigger machines push that higher. Cold starts on workspace creation can run 30-60 seconds without prebuilds, and prebuilds count against billable storage.
The upside: The free tier covers 60 hours per month on a 2-core machine, slightly more generous than the legacy Gitpod free allotment, and devcontainer.json files migrate from Gitpod with minimal changes (the same VS Code dev container spec underpins both). Deep GitHub integration, Copilot bundled at the user level rather than the workspace level, and the same parent company as VS Code itself mean the integration story is the cleanest in this set. For Gitpod subscribers whose code already lives on GitHub and whose monthly use sits comfortably under the per-hour curve, Codespaces is the most direct migration path on offer.
Strengths
+Free tier covers 60 hours per month on 2-core, slightly above the legacy Gitpod free allotment
+devcontainer.json migrates from Gitpod with minimal config changes
+Pay-as-you-go scales with usage; light users land well under Ona Core's entry rate
+Deepest GitHub integration in this set; Copilot bundled at the account level
Trade-offs
−GitHub-only; GitLab and Bitbucket repos are out of scope
−Per-hour pricing climbs above Ona Core sustained on 8-hour daily use
−Cold starts on workspace creation without prebuilds
Free
$0 for 60 hours/mo on 2-core
Pay-as-you-go
$0.18/hr for 2-core machines
Storage
$0.07/GB/mo above 15 GB free
Best for
GitHub-centric devs with devcontainer.json
Pricing verified
2026-05-09
Migration steps
Confirm the source repo lives on GitHub; if any project lives on GitLab or Bitbucket, plan that codebase separately because Codespaces will not cover it.
Copy your existing .gitpod.yml configuration to .devcontainer/devcontainer.json; most dependency installs and port forwards translate one-to-one (the underlying spec is the same).
Sign in to github.com/codespaces with your GitHub account and create a new Codespace from the migrated repo to validate the workflow end-to-end.
Estimate sustained monthly cost by tracking workspace hours over a typical week; if you exceed 8 hours daily on a 2-core machine the rate climbs above Ona Core, in which case consider a different pick.
Cancel Ona Core through ona.com once Codespaces covers your daily work; export any prebuild artifacts you need before the cancel date.
Not for: Skip Codespaces if your repos live on GitLab or Bitbucket, if sustained 8-hour daily use is the typical pattern (per-hour math climbs above Ona Core fast), or if your team needs a single managed environment across multiple Git providers.
CodeSandbox is what Gitpod Classic Personal would look like if the company had built around browser-collaborative editing and frontend tooling rather than full project cloud-dev environments.
The trade: The product is purpose-built for frontend and JavaScript work and rated less polished for backend-heavy or non-JavaScript stacks; Devboxes cover full-stack work but are a secondary surface. The 40 credits per month on Pro can run out for users who run heavy compute, and per-credit billing on top of the flat rate adds friction at scale. Smaller plugin ecosystem than Codespaces or JetBrains.
The upside: Pro at $9/mo runs at less than half Ona Core's entry rate and matches the legacy Gitpod Personal flat-rate exactly, which makes it the cheapest managed flat-rate cloud-dev path in this set. The free tier covers public sandboxes plus unlimited Devboxes (Devboxes are the full-stack VM-backed environment), which is enough to validate the workflow without commitment. URL-based collaboration is the cleanest in this set for pair programming and reproducible-bug-report sharing. For subscribers whose actual Gitpod usage was browser-collaborative experimentation rather than long-running project work, CodeSandbox covers that lane more directly than Codespaces or any local pick.
“They provide practically the same hours worth of coding like Codespaces, with a cheap upgradable plan.”
Strengths
+Pro flat-rate runs at less than half Ona Core's entry rate; matches the legacy Gitpod Personal rate exactly
+Free tier covers public sandboxes plus unlimited Devboxes for genuine evaluation
+Cleanest browser-collaboration UX in this set with URL-based sharing for pair programming
+Frontend and JavaScript tooling rated above Codespaces and Gitpod for that workflow
Trade-offs
−Less polished for backend-heavy or non-JavaScript stacks
−40-credit limit on Pro can run out under heavy compute
−Smaller plugin ecosystem than Codespaces or JetBrains
Free
Public sandboxes, unlimited Devboxes
Pro
$9/mo with private repos and 40 credits/mo
Team
$18/user/mo for shared environments
Best for
Browser-collaborative frontend coding
Pricing verified
2026-05-09
Migration steps
Sign up for the CodeSandbox free tier and recreate a representative project as a Devbox; validate the dependency install path and any backend services your project needs.
Audit whether your Gitpod use was actually long-running project work or shorter browser-collaboration sessions; if more than half of sessions ran under an hour, the flat-rate Pro tier is the right shape.
Subscribe to Pro for private repos and validate the 40-credit budget against a typical month of compute use before cancelling Ona.
Set up URL-based collaboration links for any pair-programming or bug-reproduction flows you previously ran in Gitpod.
Cancel Ona Core through ona.com once CodeSandbox covers the workflow.
Not for: Skip CodeSandbox if your work is heavily backend or requires long-running compute that exceeds the 40-credit budget, if your stack is non-JavaScript and you need polished tooling for it, or if multi-platform Git provider support (GitLab, Bitbucket) is a hard requirement.
GitHub Copilot is what Gitpod Classic Personal plus a separate AI completion tool would have looked like as a single subscription, except priced for the AI piece alone and run on a local machine.
The trade: Requires local IDE setup, which is exactly the friction that drove some users to cloud dev in the first place; if multi-machine reproducibility was the actual lever, switching to local Copilot does not solve that problem. Microsoft and OpenAI data handling is a concern for some users, and the Enterprise tier is needed to access fine-tuned models and stricter data controls. The free tier caps at 2,000 completions per month, which is enough for occasional use but runs out under sustained daily coding.
The upside: Pro at $10/mo runs at half Ona Core's entry rate and matches the legacy Gitpod Personal rate within a dollar, with completion quality widely rated as the strongest in the field after the GPT-4o integration. Runs in VS Code, all JetBrains IDEs, Neovim, and Visual Studio with the same subscription, so the choice of local editor does not constrain the AI access. For Gitpod subscribers who realized the cloud-dev preference was driven by AI completion availability rather than the cloud workspace itself, the local-IDE-plus-Copilot combination delivers the actual lever at the cheapest pure-AI rate in this set.
Strengths
+Pro at the cheapest pure-AI rate in this set runs at half Ona Core's entry rate
+Best-in-class completion quality after the GPT-4o integration
+Runs in VS Code, JetBrains, Neovim, and Visual Studio on the same subscription
+Free tier covers 2,000 completions per month for evaluation
Trade-offs
−Requires local IDE setup; multi-machine reproducibility is not solved
−Microsoft and OpenAI data handling concerns for some users
−Enterprise tier needed for fine-tuned models
Free
2,000 completions per month
Pro
$10/mo or $100/yr
Business
$19/user/mo for teams
Enterprise
$39/user/mo with fine-tuned models
Pricing verified
2026-05-09
Migration steps
Install VS Code (or another free local editor like Zed) on your primary machine.
Install the GitHub Copilot extension and sign in with your GitHub account; the free tier covers initial evaluation.
Reproduce one of your Gitpod project setups locally with the same toolchain to validate the workflow.
Subscribe to Copilot Pro once the local-plus-AI pattern covers your daily work.
Cancel Ona Core through ona.com; if multi-machine reproducibility was actually doing real work, layer Coder or DevPod self-hosted on top rather than retrying a managed cloud-dev tier.
Not for: Skip Copilot if your actual Gitpod lever was multi-machine cloud reproducibility (no local setup at all) rather than AI completion, if you primarily code on a low-spec machine that cannot run a local IDE comfortably, or if data-handling constraints rule out Microsoft and OpenAI processing.
JetBrains is what local development looks like when refactoring depth and language-aware analysis are the actual differentiator rather than AI completion or cloud workspace convenience.
The trade: Individual Tool is the most expensive editor subscription in this lineup, and All Products Pack stepped up to its current annual rate in 2026 (a 13 percent year-over-year jump). The IDEs are CPU and memory hungry compared to VS Code or Zed, the AI Assistant trails Copilot on completion quality, and Gateway (the JetBrains remote-dev product) is functional but a separate workflow rather than a polished one. Requires local install and configuration, which adds the same friction that drove some users to cloud-dev originally.
The upside: Refactoring, language-aware navigation, and framework-specific tooling on Java, Kotlin, .NET, Ruby, and Go are still well ahead of any free editor or AI plugin combination. Gateway covers the cloud-friendly remote development case for teams that need it. The All Products Pack covers IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate, WebStorm, PyCharm Pro, GoLand, RubyMine, CLion, Rider, and the broader product family on a single subscription, which is the right shape for polyglot developers. For Gitpod subscribers whose stack actually benefits from this depth and whose cloud-dev preference was about avoiding setup friction rather than the cloud itself, switching to JetBrains locally is the move.
Strengths
+Deepest refactoring and language-aware analysis on Java, Kotlin, .NET, Ruby, and Go
+All Products Pack covers the full IDE family for polyglot developers on a single subscription
+Gateway available for remote development if cloud-friendly aspects are still doing real work
+Perpetual fallback license after 12 months keeps the editor working if the subscription lapses
Trade-offs
−Most expensive editor subscription in this lineup; Individual Tool runs above Pro Copilot
−AI Assistant trails Copilot on completion quality
−CPU and memory hungry compared to VS Code or Zed
Individual Tool
$16.90/mo or $169/yr
All Products Pack
$29.90/mo or $249/yr (2026 step-up)
Gateway
Free, runs alongside Individual or All Products
Best for
Refactoring depth on Java, Kotlin, .NET, Go
Pricing verified
2026-05-09
Migration steps
Identify the IDE that matches your primary language; if you work in two or more JetBrains-supported languages, the All Products Pack annual rate is the cheaper math.
Subscribe to Individual Tool or All Products Pack on annual billing for the discount over monthly billing.
Install the IDE on your local machine and migrate any project setup and dependencies from your prior Gitpod workspace.
If multi-machine cloud-friendly aspects still matter, install Gateway and configure a remote dev host (your own server or a VPS) before cancelling Ona.
Cancel Ona Core through ona.com once the JetBrains plus optional Gateway setup covers your daily work.
Not for: Skip JetBrains if your stack is primarily TypeScript or Python (where VS Code is at parity at no cost), if AI completion is the actual lever (Copilot delivers that at half the rate), or if you specifically need a fully managed cloud-dev environment without any local setup.
Paid plans from $16.90/mo
When to stay with Gitpod
Stay with Ona (formerly Gitpod) if your team has the AWS infrastructure budget and headcount to run Ona Flex self-hosted, if the new AI agent orchestration in Ona Core is genuinely doing real work for your engineering org, or if your devcontainer.json setup is so deeply intertwined with Gitpod prebuilds that the migration cost outweighs a few months of the new pricing model. The picks below are honest exits for solo developers and small teams whose cloud-dev workflow died with the Gitpod Classic shutdown on October 15, 2025, who want a managed flat-rate or pay-as-you-go path without managing AWS infrastructure, or who realize their actual lever was AI completion in a local IDE rather than the cloud workspace itself.
Gitpod alternatives are scored on the patterns that actually drive switching after the October 2025 Classic shutdown and the rebrand to Ona: GitHub-native cloud dev with devcontainer.json continuity (Codespaces), browser-collaborative coding at the cheapest managed flat-rate (CodeSandbox), local IDE plus AI completion when AI was the lever (Copilot), and deep professional IDE locally for stacks that benefit from refactoring depth (JetBrains). Each pick leads one of those lanes rather than competing on the same dimension.
Pricing was verified on each vendor's site on 2026-05-09 (ona.com, github.com/features/codespaces, codesandbox.io, github.com/features/copilot, jetbrains.com/store) and cross-checked against 2026 trade-press reviews and the GitHub community discussion threads on Codespaces alternatives. Recent structural changes flagged in the update log: Gitpod Classic shut down on October 15, 2025 and gitpod.io now redirects to ona.com; Codeium rebranded to Windsurf in April 2025 and was acquired by Cognition AI in December 2025, removing it from this lineup; JetBrains All Products Pack stepped up 13 percent year-over-year in 2026. The page is reviewed quarterly; the next review is scheduled for August 2026.
Update history2 updates
Major revision to full Stage 2 schema. Verified Ona pricing on 2026-05-09 against ona.com/pricing: Free tier offers $10 of one-time usage (40 OCUs), Core from $20/mo with 80-2,200 OCUs (monthly recurring), Enterprise custom. Critical context: Gitpod Classic pay-as-you-go shut down on October 15, 2025; gitpod.io now redirects to ona.com; the rebrand pivots the product toward AI agent orchestration with credit-based OCU billing rather than the legacy $9/mo flat-rate Personal tier. This invalidates the prior entry's pricing-comparison framing entirely and shifts the audience from cost-conscious cloud-dev subscribers to migration-driven Gitpod refugees. Cross-pick pricing brought current: GitHub Codespaces Free 60 hours/mo on 2-core unchanged, Pay-as-you-go $0.18/hr for 2-core machines and $0.07/GB/mo storage above 15 GB; CodeSandbox Free with public sandboxes and unlimited Devboxes, Pro at $9/mo with private repos and 40 credits/mo; GitHub Copilot Free at 2,000 completions/mo, Pro at $10/mo or $100/yr, Business at $19/user/mo, Enterprise at $39/user/mo; JetBrains All Products Pack stepped up to $249/yr ($29.90/mo monthly billing) for individuals (a 13 percent jump in 2026), Individual Tool stays at $16.90/mo or $169/yr. Picks restructured: dropped codeium (now Windsurf after April 2025 rebrand and Cognition AI acquisition; the prior entry's free-unlimited framing is stale), kept github-codespaces, codesandbox, github-copilot, jetbrains; added github-codespaces and codesandbox to _derived-from-editorial.ts and re-seeded. Added structured verdict with deep-links to top 4 picks, quickVerdict (4 entries plus skipIf), featureMatrix (8 dimensions across the 4 picks), usageCosts (3 levels at typical solo-developer monthly use), per-pick author ratings, 4-paragraph scannable intro that names the rebrand and shutdown directly, trade/upside structure on all 4 pick rationales, Pricing verified keyFact on every pick, and 1 sourced testimonial (CodeSandbox via the GitHub community discussion thread on Codespaces alternatives). Single sourced quote because Reddit and named-blog harvest passes returned mostly thematic frustration ('they shut down and turned into YET ANOTHER AI startup') rather than first-person switch-destination quotes for github-codespaces, github-copilot, or jetbrains; ship-zero-rather-than-fabricate rule applied for the other three picks.
Initial published version with 5 picks.
Frequently asked questions about Gitpod alternatives
What happened to Gitpod and the $9/mo Personal tier?
Gitpod Classic pay-as-you-go shut down on October 15, 2025. The company rebranded to Ona, gitpod.io now redirects to ona.com, and the $9/mo Personal flat-rate tier is gone. The new Ona Core tier starts at $20/mo with credit-based OCU billing rather than flat-rate hours; the self-hosted replacement, Ona Flex, supports only AWS at launch. Most subscribers landing on this page are weighing migration paths because the product they paid for no longer exists rather than a price comparison against a still-active service.
Will my .gitpod.yml configuration migrate to GitHub Codespaces?
Largely yes. Both Gitpod and Codespaces use the same VS Code dev container specification underneath; copying the install steps, ports, and prebuild settings from .gitpod.yml into .devcontainer/devcontainer.json typically covers most of the migration. The main differences sit around Gitpod-specific extensions and the prebuild trigger model, which Codespaces handles differently. Plan for an hour or two of cleanup per active project; complex monorepos with custom prebuild logic can take longer.
Is Ona Core at $20/mo worth it compared to the alternatives?
Worth it if the new AI agent orchestration is genuinely doing real work for your engineering org, if your devcontainer.json setup is so deeply tied to Gitpod prebuilds that the migration cost runs above several months of Core, or if your team has the AWS infrastructure budget and headcount to run Ona Flex self-hosted. For solo developers and small teams whose actual workflow was the legacy flat-rate cloud-dev environment, the alternatives on this page cover the same ground at lower or comparable cost: Codespaces matches the cloud-dev pattern with pay-as-you-go pricing on GitHub repos, CodeSandbox Pro covers browser-collaborative coding at less than half Core's entry rate, and Copilot plus a free local IDE delivers the AI lever at half Core's rate.
Can I still use cloud development if my code is on GitLab or Bitbucket?
Codespaces is GitHub-only, so it does not cover GitLab or Bitbucket repos. CodeSandbox supports both, which makes it the cleanest managed cloud-dev path for non-GitHub stacks in this lineup. For teams that need a fully open-source self-hosted cloud dev environment without the AWS-only constraint of Ona Flex, DevPod (open-source devcontainer runtime) and Coder (Terraform-based, self-hosted) are vendor-neutral options outside this page's lineup; both run on any cloud provider rather than AWS-only.
What discounts are available on these picks?
GitHub Copilot is free for verified students, teachers, and maintainers of popular open-source projects (more than 1,000 repository stars or significant contribution history). JetBrains offers free All Products Pack licenses for verified students and teachers, free open-source licenses for active maintainers of qualifying projects, and a 25 percent classroom discount; annual billing on All Products Pack saves the equivalent of two months versus monthly billing. CodeSandbox does not publish a public discount program but the free tier covers genuine evaluation. GitHub Codespaces has no equivalent free-tier-for-students program beyond the standard 60-hour monthly allotment, but the GitHub Education pack bundles Codespaces credits and Copilot Pro for verified students.
Ready to switch?
Our top Gitpod alternative: GitHub Codespaces
GitHub Codespaces is the most direct cloud-dev replacement when code already lives on GitHub; pay-as-you-go pricing scales with usage, the free tier covers 60 hours per month on a 2-core machine, and devcontainer.json migrates with minimal config changes.
The team behind subrupt.com. We track subscriptions, surface cheaper alternatives, and publish comparisons where the score formula is on the page so you can recompute it yourself. We do not claim 30,000 hours of testing. What we claim is live pricing from our database, a transparent composite score, and honest savings math against a category baseline.
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