Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
Change tools
For everyday users who just want AI to help review code and catch bugs, Qodo is the clear winner—it's simpler, cheaper, and works right in your editor. GitLab is a massive, powerful platform for entire software teams, but it's overkill and too complex for a single person or small project. The single biggest difference: Qodo is a focused code-review tool you can use in minutes, while GitLab is a full DevOps operating system that takes days to set up.
GitLab
Qodo
Scores at a glance
Choose GitLab if
Choose Qodo if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| GitLab | Qodo | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
No—Qodo is specifically built for code review and is much easier to use. GitLab can review code too, but it's part of a much larger system and harder to set up just for that.
No. Qodo works as a plugin inside desktop code editors like VS Code or JetBrains. There is no mobile app.
Qodo. It has a free tier that covers basic code review. GitLab's AI features are part of a paid plan, and pricing is not clearly published—likely expensive for one person.
Yes, both tools are for people who write code. GitLab also requires understanding of DevOps concepts like pipelines and YAML configuration.
Yes—that's one of its main strengths. GitLab can automatically build, test, and deploy your code. Qodo cannot do any of that.
Qodo wins for everyday code review; GitLab wins only if you need a full DevOps platform.
If you're a regular developer who just wants a smarter code reviewer that's easy to set up and won't break the bank, start with Qodo. If you're running a whole software team and need a single platform for planning, coding, testing, and deploying—and you have time to learn it—GitLab is the powerhouse. For most everyday users, Qodo is the practical choice.