The LogicMint Free Tier: What You Get, and Its Limits
The free tier exists so you can try LogicMint properly before paying a rupee or a dollar — describe an idea, watch it become a working app, and decide if it fits how you work. It is genuinely useful, and it is also deliberately limited. Here is exactly what you get and where the limits are, so there are no surprises.
What the free tier gives you
On the free plan you can describe an app in plain English, generate it, and preview the working result live in your browser. You get a set number of builds to explore the platform, and every build runs through the same Generate-Verify Loop as paid plans, so what you see actually runs. It is a real, hands-on way to judge the output quality for your own use case.
Shared bandwidth and build queues
Free builds run on shared capacity. That keeps the free tier genuinely free, but it comes with two practical trade-offs:
- Available bandwidth — free builds use a shared pool of compute, so throughput isn't guaranteed.
- Longer queues at peak — when a lot of people are building at once, free builds wait in a standard queue and can take noticeably longer to start and finish. Paid plans get a priority queue that skips ahead.
In quiet periods you may not notice this at all; during busy periods, expect some delay. It's the honest cost of a free tier that doesn't charge you.
Downloading your code is a paid feature
You can build and preview freely, but the generated code is not downloadable on the free tier. Downloading and owning the full, MIT-licensed source — to self-host, modify, and keep with no lock-in — is reserved for paid plans. If owning the code is the point for you, that's the upgrade line.
Why the limits are set this way
Generating full applications uses real compute, and code ownership is the core value we charge for. Keeping downloads and priority behind the paid tier is what lets us offer a free tier that is actually useful rather than a locked demo. The free plan is for evaluating; the paid plans are for shipping and owning what you build.
When it's time to upgrade
Move to a paid plan when you want to download and own your code, when you're building regularly and want priority (faster) builds instead of the standard queue, or when you need higher build limits. Paid plans also unlock build history and, on Pro and above, support. See the pricing page for what each tier includes — and remember credits don't expire the way burn-it-or-lose-it builders work.