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 are not professional developers, neither Greptile nor Qodo is the right tool—they are both built for software engineers working with code repositories. Qodo edges ahead for teams that need automated code review and compliance enforcement directly in their IDE, while Greptile offers deeper codebase analysis but requires more setup. The single biggest difference: Qodo integrates into your coding workflow as you type, whereas Greptile analyzes entire repositories after the fact.
Greptile
Qodo
Scores at a glance
Choose Greptile if
Choose Qodo if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| Greptile | Qodo | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
No. Both tools require a desktop environment—Greptile works through GitHub/GitLab in a browser, and Qodo needs a code editor like VS Code. There are no mobile apps.
Neither is ideal for non-developers. If you must pick one, Greptile's PR summaries and diagrams are more accessible for someone who doesn't write code daily. Qodo is built for active coders.
Yes, for basic code review and bug detection. But the credit system limits how many reviews you can run per month. For heavy use, the $30/month per user plan is more reliable.
Yes, Greptile supports both GitHub and GitLab. You install it as an app on your repository, and it posts comments on pull requests.
Qodo is easier—install a plugin in your code editor and connect your repo. Greptile requires installing an app, selecting repositories, and waiting for it to build a codebase graph, which takes more time.
Qodo wins for everyday coding help; Greptile wins for deep, diagram-rich code review—but both are for developers only.
If you're a developer who writes code daily, start with Qodo's free tier—it's easier to set up and helps you as you type. If you manage a team that reviews pull requests and you want thorough analysis with diagrams, Greptile is worth the extra setup and cost. For non-developers, neither tool is built for you.