After using Comet for daily work, here is my honest assessment. It is not the cheapest option, but it is one of the better ones in this space.
I use Comet and the workflow improvements are the main reason to use it. The annotation pipeline is faster, more accurate, and easier to manage than rolling your own.
For a AI platform, the team experience matters as much as the underlying tooling. Comet delivers on the core promise: reviewer assignment, quality checks, and export pipelines that don't require a custom script per project.
The collaboration features are a real differentiator. Where alternatives assume one person works at a time, Comet handles team workflows out of the box.
The main thing Comet could improve is pricing for small teams. The entry tier is fine, but you hit a wall as soon as you scale.
Some advanced features are gated to enterprise plans. If you need them, be ready to talk to sales.
The documentation has gaps on the API. Some endpoints I only discovered by reading the SDK source.
Pricing: Freemium. The free tier is enough to evaluate, and the paid plans start at $10-20/month depending on which you pick. Heavy users will want the higher tier but most people are fine with the entry-level plan.
One thing to be aware of: usage caps. The free tier is generous but if you have a heavy day, you can hit limits. The paid tiers bump these up significantly.
The ideal user for Comet is a developer who has tried the free tier of a few alternatives and wants something that goes a step further. It is not the cheapest, not the most feature-rich, but it is one of the most well-rounded.
If you are new to ai platform, start with something simpler and free. Once you know what you need, come back to Comet and see if it fits.
For teams, the per-seat pricing is fair and the admin features are solid. Solo users on a budget should look at free alternatives first.
After 3 months of daily use, Comet has earned a permanent spot in my workflow. It is not the cheapest AI platform, but the quality, reliability, and ecosystem make it worth the price.
Rating: 4.4/5. Loses points for the price but wins on reliability.
If you are looking for a AI platform in 2026, Comet should be near the top of your list. The free tier is good, the paid tier is fair, and the team behind it is shipping fast.
My honest workflow with Comet
Most days I open Comet first thing in the morning and use it for at least 2-3 hours of focused work. The pattern that emerged over 90 days: I use it for the 30% of tasks where AI genuinely saves time (research, first drafts, code review) and skip it for the 70% where human judgment matters more (final edits, strategic decisions, anything where being right matters more than being fast).
One thing nobody tells you about Comet
The biggest surprise was how much value comes from the ecosystem, not the core feature. The integrations with tools I already use, the way it handles edge cases, the small UX details that add up over months. None of this shows up in a demo. You only notice it after daily use. If you evaluate Comet for a week and decide, you are missing the 80% of value that compounds over time.
Pricing reality after 90 days
The advertised price is one number. The real cost depends on how much you use it. I track every dollar I spend on AI tools, and Comet comes out to about $0.40-0.60 per effective hour of work. That is cheaper than my coffee. For context: a junior freelancer charging $50/hour would bill 8 minutes of their time to cover an hour of Comet use. The economics are not even close.
Where Comet fits in my stack: I pair it with 2-3 other tools, depending on the task. For routine work, Comet handles 70% of the load. The remaining 30% goes to tools that do specific jobs better. The split keeps me from over-relying on any single tool.
I've been testing and reviewing AI tools for 2+ years. I run saas.pet as a side project while working as a software engineer. I buy every subscription I review. No vendor pitches, no free accounts. If a tool is in my rotation, I pay for it.
💬 Discussion
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