Ask HN: How much are you spending on AI coding at work?
Jensen Huang recently said that he thinks an engineer who makes $500k should spend at least $250k a year on “tokens” which is an astounding figure. I personally don’t know how I could spend that much if I tried. Obviously he has a huge financial incentive to convince people that $250k per engineer is reasonable, but it got me thinking that it’s time for a survey.
How much are you and your coworkers spending on AI coding tools at work? I’m talking about Cursor, Claude Code, etc. Not all AI-powered SaaS, just the stuff that’s metered by token. The Microsoft GitHub Copilot Pro Plus Premium Ultra Max at $40 a month is enough for me. My job isn’t only about coding. Moreover, if you spend that much on tokens, that sounds like a skill issue and you may be creating a lot of technical debt. I don’t see how anyone can have the brain capacity to handle enormous code bases. ~$250 in 3 weeks at work. Its not steady, equal token distribution per day. There are days when it is $40 and there are days when it is < $10. Mostly due to bottlenecks like waiting on reviews, figma designs, story refinement, etc. (Sidebar: There is a prediction that the traditional roles of Designer, Product Owner and Programmer are disappearing and converging into one single specialized role. (Claude Code has a blog about this) and I feel there is truth in this.) So, my runrate right now is ~$4,200 per year, but I won't be surprised if it goes up. It depends on several factors. It is crazy when I hear how much some people spend on AI! Having an agent cut out some of the boilerplate code is useful, but beyond that, are people just creating a backlog wishlist and then walking away? That’s exactly what we’re doing. Connect the agent to your GitHub issues, tell it implement each one and spin on a loop until it’s finished. There’s more nuance to it than that but at a high level yeah, that’s how some people are using it. $40/month at work and $10/month at home, and it's more than I can use. I cannot imagine productively spending $250k/year on LLM coding - you'd need some kind of massive tree of agents reviewing each other's work and I think even then you would struggle to keep them on-task and sanity-checked. However, I don't make $500k a year so what do I know... We’re at around $100/mo/engineer, mostly for Cursor. We’re using it for augmentation, not vibing, and review every line (with less detailed attention to tests), because we’re building the foundation of something that needs to be secure and stable for several years. I've spent $15 000 this month. Most of it isn't code, I'm vibe coding a K8s cluster from scratch and having endless discussions trying to debug network latency. We're sitting around $300/month across a couple of tools. Felt like a lot initially, then we know it's actually worth it You know, wouldn't it be better to ask, how much is the avegare cost of shipped feature and if that has gone down at all? We are way past this question now. About $50 a day