
Perplexity, an AI-powered search platform whose investors include Jeff Bezos and NVIDIA, has announced the launch of its most advanced subscription yet: Perplexity Max.
With Perplexity Max’s pricing, which starts at $200/month the company aligns itself alongside OpenAI and Anthropic, aiming to compete directly in the enterprise-grade AI tools market.
Perplexity Max includes unlimited use of Labs, unlocking the ability to generate unlimited reports, spreadsheets, presentations, and custom web applications. Labs have been available under the company’s Pro tier, but access was restricted. Now Max subscribers can create as many projects as they like, making it especially attractive for researchers, analysts, content creators, and business strategists working on complex or data-heavy tasks.
One of the biggest draws for Max users is early access to new products, including Comet, Perplexity’s upcoming AI-powered web browser. This gives Max users a chance to test-drive new tools long before they’re available to the broader public. The subscription also unlocks additional premium data sources and advanced AI model options unavailable in standard plans.
“We are constantly launching new products and features at Perplexity, and we’re excited to share them first with AI users who demand the newest and best,” Perplexity wrote in its official announcement.
The company also noted that Max subscribers will get priority usage rights for leading models like OpenAI’s o3-pro and Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.
Pricing and how to upgrade
Perplexity Max is priced at $200 per month or $2,000 annually. The plan is now available on iOS and the web, with Android and desktop versions expected soon.
Users can upgrade directly from their Settings page. For those switching from the $20/month Pro plan, Perplexity says the billing will be prorated. Refunds are available if a user cancels within 48 hours of upgrading.
Following an AI industry trend
Perplexity’s launch underscores a broader industry trend: AI companies are increasingly catering to professionals willing to pay top dollar for unrestricted AI access. But with legal challenges like the BBC’s copyright complaint and rumors of an Apple acquisition, Perplexity’s future remains under scrutiny.
Read our article about Perplexity’s AI-powered Comet browser and how it could redefine online search and productivity for enterprise users.