Augment Code vs Greptile
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
Read full review →Greptile
AI codebase search and PR review that understands your entire repo, not just the diff
From $30/mo
Read full review →Side-by-side comparison
| Augment Code | Greptile | |
|---|---|---|
| Tagline | AI coding assistant built for million-line enterprise codebases | AI codebase search and PR review that understands your entire repo, not just the diff |
| Pricing | Free + $50/mo | From $30/mo |
| Categories | coding, vscode-extension, jetbrains, enterprise | coding, code-review, code-search |
| Made by | Augment Code | Greptile |
| Launched | 2024-04 | 2024-03 |
| Platforms | macOS, Windows, Linux | Web, API, 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
Greptile highlights
- + Full codebase indexing for cross-repo semantic search
- + PR review with context from the entire repository, not just the diff
- + Natural-language queries across all indexed repos
- + API access for building internal tools and AI agents on top of your codebase
- + GitHub and GitLab integration
Frequently Asked Questions
Which is better, Augment Code or Greptile?
Neither is universally better. Augment Code (Free + $50/mo) leans into coding, while Greptile (From $30/mo) is closer to coding. Pick based on which workflow you actually do every day.
What is the price difference between Augment Code and Greptile?
Augment Code is free + $50/mo. Greptile is from $30/mo. See the pricing row in the comparison table.
Can I use Augment Code and Greptile 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.