Provider pricing

Cohere pricing: API cost per model, user, and month

Cohere lists 8 priced models in the ByteCosts index, with Command R7B at about $0.071 per million tokens on ByteCosts' 70% input / 30% output blend. For most AI apps the bill is driven by output tokens, retry rate, and prompt-cache hit rate far more than the headline input price, so Cohere is cost-effective when your workload is input-heavy (RAG, classification) or can cache a large shared prefix. Compare Cohere against alternatives on a real workload - seats, requests, and token mix - before committing to a model or a subscription, because a cheaper per-token price can still lose once power users and long outputs are priced in.

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Cohere pricing at a glance

  • Cheapest tracked chat model: Command R7B at $0.071 per 1M tokens (blended)
  • Flagship: Command A at $4.75 per 1M tokens (blended)
  • 8 priced models in the index, updated July 9, 2026

Cohere model prices

Per-million-token list prices for current Cohere models, from the ByteCosts pricing index. Output tokens usually cost several times more than input.

Cohere model prices per million tokens
ModelInputOutputContextIntelligence
Command A$2.50$10.00256K22.5
Command R$0.150$0.600128K3
Command R+$2.50$10.00128K3
Command R7B$0.037$0.150128K-
Command R7B Arabic$0.037$0.150128K-
Command A Plus$2.50$10.00128K-
Command A Reasoning$2.50$10.00256K-
Command A Vision$2.50$10.00128K-

When Cohere is cost-effective

Token price alone does not decide cost. The variables that actually move an AI bill are: how many output tokens each call emits (output is the expensive side), how often calls retry, what fraction of the input prefix can be served from prompt cache, and how heavily your top 1% of users use the product.

Cohere tends to win when your workload is input-heavy with short outputs, when you can cache a large shared system prompt or document context, or when a smaller Cohere model clears your quality bar. It tends to lose when outputs are long and uncached, where a cheaper-per-output model compounds the saving across millions of calls.

Hidden costs to watch with Cohere

List pricing rarely equals your invoice. Budget for these before you commit:

  • Output-token blow-up: reasoning and verbose responses multiply the most expensive token class.
  • Retries and tool loops: a single failed agent step can re-send the whole context.
  • Cache misses: prompt caching only saves money above a break-even reuse count; cold prefixes pay the write premium.
  • Power users: a small share of heavy users can dominate spend and erase a plan's margin.
  • Egress and gateway fees: LLM gateways and observability add a percentage on top of raw model cost.

Limitations before production billing decisions

Treat ByteCosts calculations as planning estimates, not final billing totals. Real invoices can differ because token mix, retry rate, cache hit rate, rate limits, taxes, gateway fees, regional pricing, and negotiated discounts change the effective cost.

Verify the provider source before production billing decisions, then compare the estimate with your own logs or invoice once production traffic is live.

Lower-blend alternatives to Cohere

On ByteCosts' 70% input / 30% output chat blend, these providers screen lower than Cohere. Treat this as a shortlist, not a decision - check the selected model against your real token mix:

  • Mistral - $0.040 blended via Ministral 3B (latest), 28 priced models.

Frequently asked questions

How much does Cohere cost per million tokens?

Cohere's low-cost tracked chat row is Command R7B at about $0.071 per million tokens on ByteCosts' 70% input / 30% output blend. That same model's component rates are $0.037 input and $0.150 output; flagship models cost more. See the price table above for current per-model rates.

Is Cohere cheaper than the alternatives?

It depends on the workload. Cohere can be cheaper for input-heavy or cacheable workloads even when its headline price is higher, because output volume and cache hit rate move the bill more than the per-token rate. Use the ByteCosts calculators to compare on your real traffic.

Where does ByteCosts get Cohere prices?

Prices come from Cohere's official pricing/docs pages, normalized into the ByteCosts pricing index and dated. Each record carries a confidence grade and a source link. Prices are list prices and exclude negotiated or volume discounts. Verify the provider source before production billing decisions.

Cohere pricing. ByteCosts. Updated July 9, 2026. https://bytecosts.com/pricing/cohere/

Sources

Machine-readable