Stay free if you only need access to prototype searchgpt experience (waitlist-based in 2024) and real-time web search with ai synthesis. Upgrade if you need everything in plus and higher message and search caps. Most solo builders can start free.
Why it matters: Originally launched as a limited prototype with a 10,000-user waitlist, restricting early access
Available from: ChatGPT Plus
Why it matters: Standalone SearchGPT experience has been merged into ChatGPT Search, so dedicated access is no longer offered
Available from: ChatGPT Plus
Why it matters: Can hallucinate or misattribute sources, a known limitation of LLM-based search
Available from: ChatGPT Plus
Why it matters: Publisher coverage, while growing, is narrower than Google's full web index
Available from: ChatGPT Plus
Why it matters: Privacy concerns around query data being sent to OpenAI for processing
Available from: ChatGPT Plus
SearchGPT launched in July 2024 as a prototype with a 10,000-user waitlist, and OpenAI has since integrated its core capabilities into ChatGPT Search, which became generally available to logged-in ChatGPT users in late 2024 and to free users in early 2025. The dedicated searchgpt.com experience redirects users toward ChatGPT's built-in search feature. This means you can access SearchGPT's functionality directly inside ChatGPT's Free, Plus, Team, and Enterprise tiers without a separate signup. For most users, using ChatGPT Search is now the recommended path.
SearchGPT itself was offered free during its prototype phase, and its successor — ChatGPT Search — is available free to all logged-in ChatGPT users. If you want higher usage limits, faster responses, and priority access to new features, ChatGPT Plus is $20/month, Team is $25/user/month, and Enterprise pricing is custom. Compared to Perplexity Pro at $20/month and Kagi Ultimate at $25/month, SearchGPT's free tier inside ChatGPT is notably generous. There are no per-query fees or API costs for end-user search.
Unlike Google and Bing, which return ranked lists of links, SearchGPT synthesizes information from the web into conversational, direct answers with inline source citations. It is built on GPT-4 class models, so it understands complex multi-part questions and maintains conversational context across follow-ups in a single session. Traditional search engines require you to click multiple results and piece together answers yourself, while SearchGPT does the synthesis up front. However, Google still has a substantially larger index and better coverage for niche or long-tail queries.
OpenAI has announced content partnerships with major publishers including News Corp (The Wall Street Journal, New York Post), The Atlantic, Vox Media, Associated Press, Financial Times, Axel Springer (Politico, Business Insider), Le Monde, Prisa Media, Condé Nast, Hearst, and Time. These partnerships give SearchGPT direct access to high-quality journalism with proper attribution. Publisher content appears with clickable citations that drive traffic back to the original source. OpenAI continues to add partners, so coverage expands over time.
SearchGPT itself does not have a standalone consumer API, but OpenAI has introduced web search capabilities inside the Chat Completions and Responses APIs via the gpt-4o-search-preview and gpt-4o-mini-search-preview models (released 2025). Developers can integrate real-time web search into their own applications by calling these models with pricing based on token usage plus a per-call search fee. This is the closest programmatic equivalent to SearchGPT's behavior. For end-user search, the ChatGPT interface remains the primary consumer experience.
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Last verified March 2026