OpenAI unveiled two significant tweaks to its ChatGPT offering on Monday: a new $100‑per‑month Pro subscription and a behind‑the‑scenes model swap that kicks in when users exceed their usage caps. The moves signal a clearer tiered structure for the popular chatbot, giving developers and heavy‑duty users a middle ground between the $20 Plus plan and the existing $200 Pro tier.

The $100 Pro tier, billed at roughly £89 in the UK, promises unlimited access to the latest GPT‑5.4 model and its Pro variant. It also unlocks a temporary "up to 10x" boost for Codex, OpenAI’s code‑generation engine, making it attractive for programmers who need longer, high‑intensity coding sessions. OpenAI describes the plan as delivering five times the usage allowance of Plus, while the $200 Pro tier still offers a twenty‑fold increase.

Aside from the usage boost, the new tier mirrors the higher‑priced Pro plan in almost every other respect. Subscribers receive the same suite of features, including GPT‑5.4 Pro, but at a price point that slots neatly between the light‑weight Plus offering and the premium $200 option. OpenAI hopes the middle tier will coax Plus users—many of whom rely on Codex for occasional scripting—to upgrade.

For existing Plus members, the upgrade comes with a subtle shift. The temporary Codex promotion that let Plus users enjoy occasional high‑capacity bursts is ending. Instead, OpenAI is rebalancing the plan to support steadier, everyday usage rather than occasional spikes. The change nudges power users toward the new $100 Pro tier while preserving Plus as a reliable, lower‑cost option for routine chat and light coding.

Behind the visible pricing changes, OpenAI quietly swapped the fallback model that activates when a user hits rate limits on ChatGPT‑5.3 Instant. The new default is called ChatGPT‑5.3 Instant Mini. Unlike earlier versions, the Mini model isn’t selectable in the UI; it runs automatically once limits are reached. OpenAI claims the Mini version feels more natural, offers stronger writing, and maintains better contextual awareness than its predecessor, GPT‑5 Instant Mini.

Because the fallback only engages after a user exhausts their allotted requests, the upgrade mainly affects free‑tier and Plus users who are more likely to encounter limits. Pro subscribers, with their substantially higher caps, should see the change only in rare cases. OpenAI’s description suggests the new model delivers a smoother “overflow” experience, keeping conversations coherent even when the primary model throttles.

Both updates underscore OpenAI’s strategy of layering its services. By adding a mid‑range Pro tier and refining the overflow model, the company aims to capture a broader spectrum of users—from casual chatters to developers needing intensive coding assistance. The pricing shift also clarifies the value proposition of each tier, making it easier for customers to choose a plan that matches their usage patterns.

Industry observers note that the $100 Pro plan could attract small teams and freelancers who need more than the Plus plan offers but can’t justify the $200 expense. Meanwhile, the invisible model swap hints at OpenAI’s ongoing effort to fine‑tune user experience without drawing attention to backend changes. As the AI chatbot market matures, such incremental adjustments may become the norm.

OpenAI has not indicated any immediate plans to alter the $200 Pro tier, leaving the two Pro options side by side for the foreseeable future. Users can sign up for the new tier through the standard ChatGPT subscription page, where the pricing and usage details are now listed alongside existing plans.

Este artículo fue escrito con la asistencia de IA.
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