Stay free if you only need limited clinical decision support and differential diagnosis generation (capped usage). Upgrade if you need everything in pro and direct ehr integration (notes pushed into the chart). Most solo builders can start free.
Why it matters: Restricted to licensed healthcare professionals — patients and non-clinical users cannot access the platform for self-diagnosis or general health questions
Available from: Pro
Why it matters: Specialty depth varies: well-suited to general internal medicine, family medicine, and emergency medicine, but may underperform on rare diseases or narrow subspecialties (e.g., advanced oncology subtypes, rare genetic disorders)
Available from: Pro
Why it matters: EHR integration is gated behind the $200/month Max tier — Pro users must still copy notes manually into their charting system
Available from: Pro
Why it matters: Output quality is bounded by the quality of clinician input: incomplete histories or vague problem representations produce weaker differentials
Available from: Pro
Glass Health offers three tiers per its published schema: a Free plan with limited clinical decision support, a Pro plan at $90/month with unlimited ambient scribing and unlimited clinical decision support, and a Max plan at $200/month that adds direct EHR integration on top of everything in Pro. The free tier is suitable for residents and students experimenting with the platform, while solo clinicians and small practices typically land on Pro. Max is targeted at clinicians whose workflow depends on notes flowing directly into Epic, Athena, or another EHR without manual copy-paste.
Glass AI is positioned as a clinical decision support tool, not a diagnostic device — every output is intended to assist a licensed clinician's reasoning, never to replace it. The platform explicitly emphasizes that all diagnostic and treatment decisions must be made by qualified healthcare providers using the full clinical context, patient history, and applicable standards of care. Healthcare institutions should review Glass's regulatory and compliance posture directly with the company before deploying it in clinical workflows. Individual clinicians remain responsible for verifying any AI-generated suggestion against current guidelines.
Glass's ambient scribe captures the audio of a patient encounter and generates a structured clinical note (typically SOAP-format) that the clinician can review, edit, and finalize before signing. The mobile apps on iOS and Android make it practical to use a phone as the recording device in the exam room. Glass markets itself to clinicians who must operate under HIPAA, but specific Business Associate Agreements (BAAs), data retention policies, and audit logs should be confirmed directly with Glass Health before patient-identifiable audio is processed. Most institutions require a security review prior to enabling ambient scribing on real encounters.
Yes — Glass is widely used by medical students and residents as a clinical reasoning learning tool, and the free tier provides enough access to practice differential generation on cases. The platform's problem-representation-to-differential format mirrors how clinical reasoning is formally taught in medical school and residency, making it a useful complement to case-based curricula. Trainees should still use Glass under attending supervision and treat its output as a study aid rather than a substitute for clinical training, the way one would use UpToDate or DynaMed.
Compared to the other AI Healthcare tools in our directory, Glass is one of the few that bundles ambient scribing with active clinical decision support in a single product — most scribe-only competitors like Nuance DAX or Abridge focus on note generation alone, often at premium per-provider pricing through enterprise contracts. Glass's $90/month Pro tier is notably more accessible to solo clinicians and small practices than enterprise scribe contracts, which can run several hundred dollars per provider per month. If you only need a scribe and you're already inside a large health system with a Nuance/Microsoft contract, DAX may integrate more deeply; if you want decision support plus scribing on a transparent monthly subscription, Glass is the more flexible option.
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Last verified March 2026