Agentbrisk

Augment Code vs CodeRabbit

Two of the most-asked-about agents in the coding space. Here's how they actually stack up.

Augment Code

AI coding assistant built for million-line enterprise codebases

Free + $50/mo

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CodeRabbit

AI-powered pull request reviewer that reads your diffs and posts line-level comments automatically

Free tier

Read full review →

Side-by-side comparison

Augment Code CodeRabbit
Tagline AI coding assistant built for million-line enterprise codebases AI-powered pull request reviewer that reads your diffs and posts line-level comments automatically
Pricing Free + $50/mo Free tier
Categories coding, vscode-extension, jetbrains, enterprise coding, code-review
Made by Augment Code CodeRabbit
Launched 2024-04 2023-09
Platforms macOS, Windows, Linux Web, GitHub, GitLab
Status active active

Augment Code highlights

  • + Deep context engine that indexes and reasons over million-line codebases
  • + VS Code and JetBrains IDE plugins with inline completions and chat
  • + Auggie CLI for agentic, multi-step coding tasks from the terminal
  • + SOC 2 Type II compliance with no training on customer code
  • + Pull request review and inline code chat integrated into the dev workflow

CodeRabbit highlights

  • + Automated diff review on every pull request with line-level comments
  • + PR summary generation explaining what changed and why
  • + Security and bug detection in changed code
  • + Conversation threading for follow-up in review comments
  • + Review configuration via a YAML file in your repo

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Augment Code or CodeRabbit?
Neither is universally better. Augment Code (Free + $50/mo) leans into coding, while CodeRabbit (Free tier) is closer to coding. Pick based on which workflow you actually do every day.
What is the price difference between Augment Code and CodeRabbit?
Augment Code is free + $50/mo. CodeRabbit is free tier. See the pricing row in the comparison table.
Can I use Augment Code and CodeRabbit together?
In most cases, yes. They serve overlapping but distinct needs, so running them side by side is common until you decide which fits your workflow.
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