No free plan. The cheapest way in is Self-Serve (Core) at $20/month minimum (ACU pay-as-you-go). Consider free alternatives in the browser agents category if budget is tight.
Devin self-serve pricing starts at $20/month using a pay-as-you-go ACU (Autonomous Compute Unit) model, where ACUs are consumed based on actual agent compute usage. This entry tier includes the full sandboxed agent environment with terminal and browser, GitHub integration, Devin for Terminal with cloud hand-off, and access to all core agent capabilities. Team plans start at $200/month per seat and add multi-seat collaboration, shared sessions, admin controls, higher ACU allotments, and priority support. Enterprise pricing is custom and includes SSO, audit logging, role-based access control, dedicated support and onboarding, a Data Processing Addendum, and compliance configurations including a government tier for regulated workloads. All tiers use ACU-based billing for agent compute, so actual monthly costs depend on the volume and complexity of tasks you delegate to Devin.
Devin operates autonomously but exposes review checkpoints where developers approve major architectural decisions, review pull requests, and validate deployment plans before they go live. In practice, teams report spending roughly 10-20% of their time reviewing Devin's output versus 100% hands-on coding. For sensitive changes — security-critical paths, schema migrations, and production deployments — Cognition recommends maintaining human review gates. Developers can monitor Devin's progress in real time through the session interface, intervene with course corrections at any point, and set up guardrails to enforce coding standards. The goal is supervised delegation: Devin does the implementation work while humans retain decision authority over architecture, security, and release readiness.
Yes. Devin integrates with existing Git repositories, CI/CD pipelines, issue trackers (Jira, Linear), and communication tools (Slack, email), and it can read existing code conventions, lint rules, and architecture docs to follow them. Cognition has demonstrated this on real enterprise codebases — including COBOL modernization at Fortune 500 companies and a large-scale migration at Nubank — showing that Devin can navigate complex dependency graphs, respect existing patterns, and produce pull requests that fit into standard code review workflows. Devin also works with GitHub and GitLab OAuth integration for repository access, and it can trigger and respond to CI/CD pipeline events so its changes go through the same validation gates as human-authored code.
Devin supports all major languages — Python, JavaScript/TypeScript, Java, C++, Go, Rust, and others — as well as legacy languages like COBOL, which it actively modernizes at Fortune 500 customers. It works with mainstream frameworks (React, Angular, Django, Spring, Rails) and can learn unfamiliar frameworks autonomously by browsing documentation in its sandboxed browser. Because Devin operates in a full development environment rather than relying on static code analysis, it can install packages, run build tools, and execute tests for any language or framework that runs on Linux. This environment-based approach means language support is not limited to a predefined list — if a developer can work with it in a terminal, Devin can as well.
Each Devin session runs in an isolated sandboxed environment with code and data encrypted in transit and at rest. Enterprise plans add SSO, role-based access control, audit logging, and additional compliance configurations, governed by Cognition's published Platform Terms, Enterprise Terms, Data Processing Addendum, and Acceptable Use Policy. Cognition also offers a government tier designed for regulated workloads with additional security controls. The platform is SOC 2 and GDPR compliant. Devin does not train on customer code by default, and enterprise customers can negotiate specific data handling terms through the DPA. Session data is isolated per organization, and access is controlled through API key authentication and OAuth integrations with Git providers.
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Last verified March 2026