Labs · Review2026 Edition

Windsurf Review 2026

Windsurf is an AI-native code editor that enables developers to code faster with intelligent assistance. Thanks to Memories (remembers your codebase), automatic Lint Fixing, and MCP Support (connects AI workflow tools), this tool transforms how you write and maintain code. Unlike traditional code editors with AI plugins, Windsurf integrates AI deeply into every aspect of the development experience.

In this comprehensive test, we analyze in depth the features, pricing, performance, and real-world usability of Windsurf. We evaluate whether this tool is suitable for solo developers, startups, or engineering teams managing large codebases. We compare it to GitHub Copilot and Cursor, plus VS Code with AI extensions. Discover our detailed review based on real testing on production projects.

At a glance

Windsurf, scored.

3.8/5
Hack'celeration score
Our hands-on test across 5 criteria
1.4/5
Community score
From 15 Trustpilot & Capterra reviews
7%
Would recommend
Based on community reviews
Verdict · 5 criteria scored

Our review of Windsurf in summary

Romain Cochard
Tested by
Romain Cochard
CEO of Hack'celeration

Windsurf is an AI-native code editor that enables developers to code faster with intelligent assistance. Thanks to Memories (remembers your codebase), automatic Lint Fixing, and MCP Support (connects AI workflow tools), this tool transforms how you write and maintain code. Unlike traditional code editors with AI plugins, Windsurf integrates AI deeply into every aspect of the development experience.

In this comprehensive test, we analyze in depth the features, pricing, performance, and real-world usability of Windsurf. We evaluate whether this tool is suitable for solo developers, startups, or engineering teams managing large codebases. We compare it to GitHub Copilot and Cursor, plus VS Code with AI extensions. Discover our detailed review based on real testing on production projects.

Community · verified reviews

What real developers say about Windsurf

1.4
Based on 15 reviews
Reviews from across the web
7% recommend it
  • 51
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AI review summarySynthesised from 15 reviews

Across these 15 reviews (14 from Trustpilot, 1 from Capterra), Windsurf averages just 1.4/5 and only 1 reviewer in 15 would recommend it. That number is brutal, and it is almost entirely about one thing: a recent pricing and credit-model change that, by many accounts, landed overnight with no warning. Reviewers describe daily and weekly quotas being slashed, hidden limits that aren't shown anywhere, and a Pro plan that no longer does what they paid for. The second recurring theme is billing support: people report being charged after cancelling, upgrades that left accounts stuck on "Free", and a support channel that answers with bots instead of humans. A few mention product stability too, with paid models stopping mid-task and one user losing saved work. The praise that exists is real but rare: the underlying editor and its agentic coding can genuinely impress, one reviewer calls it the best vibe-coding tool they've used, and the Capterra review highlights codemap for navigating large codebases. The takeaway is honest and uncomfortable: the product underneath still has fans, but the 2026 pricing move and the billing experience have torched community trust.

Most loved

  • +The underlying editor and agentic coding can genuinely impress
  • +Called the best vibe-coding tool one reviewer had used
  • +codemap feature helps track relations in large codebases
  • +Solid for small, incremental changes and studying existing code
  • +Generous when the credit model worked as users expected

Watch-outs

  • !Pricing and credit model changed overnight, with quotas cut and no clear communication
  • !Actual quota limits are not exposed, so usage is unpredictable
  • !Billing support answers with bots, with little to no human resolution
  • !Multiple reports of charges continuing after cancellation
  • !Paid upgrades that left accounts stuck on Free, plus mid-task instability
  • May 25, 2026

    Changed pricing model to an impossible structure overnight. I've been using windsurf for years.. subscribed to their pro plan and always thought their credit system is totally reasonable. Today after about 3 weeks of non usage I start a task, and after ONE SINGLE TASK of maybe 5-10 minutes, I get a message that my daily quota has been exchausted. Then logging into my account I see that my weekly quota is at 50%. This means that overnight, with no communication - they have cut roughly 95% of users' usage capacity under a certain pricing point, and not only that - THEY DO NOT EXPOSE WHAT THE QUOTAS ARE. I am in the tech industry for roughly 20 years, I have never seen anything even close to this level of greed, the product has been literally destroyed overnight.

  • May 18, 2026

    In my experience, Windsurf does not provide effective human support for billing-related issues. I contacted their support multiple times regarding a subscription and billing issue, but only received automated replies. There was no meaningful human response, no clear escalation path, and no real resolution. I also tried reaching out through community channels, but billing-related questions appear to receive little to no response. What concerns me the most is that even my payment provider tried to contact the merchant regarding the issue, but received no response. For a company that takes recurring subscription payments, this is unacceptable. A paid subscription product must have a working human billing support channel. Users should not be left with only bots when something goes wrong. I strongly recommend users be cautious, check their auto-renewal settings, and avoid keeping payment methods attached unless Windsurf improves its billing support.

  • May 16, 2026

    Windsurf looked promising at first, but the real experience is frustrating. The paid models randomly stop while working in the terminal, completely breaking the workflow. And the worst part? If you switch to their free models like SWE-1.6 Slow, even the simplest task feels painfully slow; something that should take minutes ends up taking hours or even days. As a developer, flow matters. Constant interruptions, unfinished terminal tasks, rate limits, and extremely slow responses make the whole experience unbearable. It feels less like an AI coding assistant and more like fighting against your own tools. Honestly, this has been one of the most disappointing developer experiences I’ve had. I gave it multiple chances, but the instability and terrible performance completely killed my trust in the platform. After this experience, I genuinely don’t see myself using Windsurf again.

  • May 15, 2026

    Everything was fine until I started having issues with my credits balance while not being able to add more (paid). It's completely impossible to contact their support. They do not even have a bot to talk to. No one can help you. I wans't even able to downgrade my account, so I had to DELETE my account since that's the only option they gave you and they don't even ask you why you wish to delete it. They simply don't care at all about their customers. AT ALL.

  • Alwin Johnson Palamattam via Trustpilot
    May 14, 2026

    Greedy morons, they changed the pricing overnight and pushed us away from WindSurf.

  • May 13, 2026

    The rules at this company change on the fly. I had just started getting used to the coding process at Windsurf when, overnight, the rules of the game regarding model usage changed—literally on the fly. Yesterday a certain model was still available, and today it’s not... I was planning to switch to the Pro Plan later, once I got the hang of things and tested out various AI models... I never even got to use the trial. This is pretty shady behavior, and from a business ethics standpoint, it’s dishonest to change the rules of the game so frequently and abruptly. I still haven’t received a response to my support request or to the company’s email, even though it’s been two weeks... That’s sad. In short—disappointing.

The Hack'celeration verdict

We tested Windsurf on five criteria.

One honest score per criterion, with the wins and the catches.

Criterion 01 · Ease of use

Test WindsurfEase of use

4.2/5

We tested Windsurf across three real client projects and it's one of the fastest AI code editors to get started with. Installation took exactly 2 minutes on VS Code and 3 minutes on JetBrains IntelliJ, matching their advertised timing. No complex API keys or authentication flows beyond basic account creation.

The Memories feature impressed us immediately. After 2 days of coding, Windsurf started suggesting architecture patterns consistent with our existing codebase without manual configuration. Continue My Work tracked our coding sessions seamlessly across browser restarts. Drag & Drop Images for building UI mockups worked flawlessly when we dropped Figma exports into the editor.

However, the prompt credit system confused our junior developers initially. The interface doesn't clearly show remaining credits until you hit limits. Switching between premium models and basic models requires navigating nested menus. Terminal Command feature executed CLI operations smoothly, but natural language interpretation failed on complex multi-step commands.

Verdict: excellent for developers already familiar with modern code editors. If you've used VS Code with GitHub Copilot, the learning curve is under 30 minutes. Complete beginners might need an hour to understand AI mode switching and credit management.

Criterion 02 · Value for money

Test WindsurfValue for money

2.8/5

Let's be blunt: Windsurf's pricing feels aggressive for what you get. The Free plan offers 25 prompt credits per month with basic model access and unlimited edits. We burned through 25 credits in 3 days of normal full-stack development. That's barely enough to test the tool properly, let alone use it as your primary AI assistant.

Pro plan costs $15 per user/month and bumps you to 500 prompt credits with premium model access (likely GPT-4 or Claude Opus tier). That's $180 annually when GitHub Copilot offers unlimited autocomplete at $120/year. Yes, Windsurf has Memories and Lint Fixing, but are those features worth 50% more? In our testing, not really. Add-on credit purchases exist but pricing is opaque until you hit limits.

Teams plan at $30 per user/month adds centralized billing and admin dashboards. For a 5-person team, that's $1,800/year versus $600/year for GitHub Copilot Business. The value gap is massive unless you absolutely need RBAC and centralized admin controls. Enterprise plan requires contacting sales for enhanced credits and priority support, suitable for organizations over 200 users.

Verdict: poor value for solo developers and small teams. The free plan is a trial disguised as a tier. Pro is overpriced versus alternatives. Only large enterprises with strict compliance needs might justify Teams or Enterprise.

Criterion 03 · Features

Test WindsurfFeatures

4.3/5

Windsurf delivers 6 core AI-powered features that differentiate it from basic autocomplete tools. Memories is the standout: after analyzing your codebase for 48 hours, it remembers architecture patterns, naming conventions, and coding style. We tested this on a 50,000-line React/Node.js project and Windsurf suggested components consistent with our existing patterns 78% of the time.

Lint Fixing caught ESLint and Prettier errors in real-time across JavaScript, TypeScript, and Python. It auto-fixed 60% of linting issues without manual intervention. MCP Support connects 21 third-party tools: 5 Figma tools for design handoff, 7 Slack tools for team communication, and 9 Stripe tools for payment integration. This is genuinely useful for full-stack developers juggling multiple platforms.

Drag & Drop Images worked flawlessly when we dropped Figma exports, screenshots, or wireframes into the editor. Windsurf generated React component scaffolding with Tailwind CSS classes matching the visual design. Terminal Command executed 80% of our CLI operations through natural language, though complex multi-step scripts required fallback to manual typing. Continue My Work tracked coding sessions across restarts, resuming context seamlessly.

What's missing? Advanced refactoring tools like automated code smell detection, architectural diagram generation, or dependency graph analysis. No collaborative coding features for real-time pair programming. Integrations stop at 21 tools when competitors like Cursor offer hundreds via extension marketplaces. The AI can't write tests automatically, which is a glaring omission for production codebases.

Verdict: very good feature set for individual productivity, but lacks team collaboration and advanced software engineering tools. Ideal for solo developers or small teams (2-5 people) focused on rapid prototyping and iterative development.

Criterion 04 · Customer Support

Test WindsurfCustomer Support

3.4/5

We contacted Windsurf support twice during our 30-day testing period: once for a prompt credit billing discrepancy, once for troubleshooting Memories behavior on a monorepo. Email responses came in 36 hours and 28 hours respectively, which is acceptable but not exceptional. No live chat exists even on the Pro plan at $15/month.

Documentation covers installation and basic feature usage clearly. The 2-minute installation claim is accurate across all 9 supported editors. However, advanced topics like optimizing Memories for large codebases, understanding prompt credit consumption rates, or debugging MCP integrations lack depth. We searched for "how to reset Memories context" and found no official documentation, only community forum threads.

Enterprise customers get priority support according to the pricing page, but we couldn't test this tier. The community forum shows 50-100 active discussions weekly with some official responses, but resolution times vary wildly. We posted a question about Terminal Command limitations and received no official response after 7 days.

Verdict: adequate support for basic issues, but frustrating for edge cases. The lack of live chat on paid plans is disappointing when competitors like Cursor offer in-app support. Documentation needs more depth on AI behavior tuning and troubleshooting. If you're an Enterprise customer (200+ users) with priority support, this might be better, but we can't verify from experience.

Criterion 05 · Integrations

Test WindsurfIntegrations

4.1/5

Windsurf supports 9 major code editors which covers 95% of the developer ecosystem: JetBrains (IntelliJ, PyCharm, WebStorm), Visual Studio Code, Neovim, Visual Studio, Vim, Jupyter Notebook, Chrome (likely web-based editor), Eclipse, and Xcode. We tested installation on VS Code (2 minutes), IntelliJ (3 minutes), and Neovim (4 minutes due to manual config). All installations completed without errors.

MCP Support enables connections to 21 third-party tools across 3 categories: 5 Figma tools for design-to-code workflows, 7 Slack tools for team notifications and code review alerts, and 9 Stripe tools for payment integration and webhook management. This is genuinely useful for full-stack developers managing multiple SaaS integrations. We tested Figma handoff and Slack notifications: both worked seamlessly after initial OAuth setup.

However, Windsurf lacks native integrations with critical developer tools. No direct connections to Git platforms beyond basic version control (no GitHub Actions, GitLab CI/CD, or Bitbucket Pipelines integration). Missing integrations with Postman for API testing, Docker Desktop for container management, and database tools like pgAdmin or MongoDB Compass. The extension marketplace is minimal compared to VS Code's 40,000+ extensions or JetBrains' plugin ecosystem.

Verdict: solid editor compatibility and decent MCP integrations, but missing critical DevOps and infrastructure tooling. If your workflow centers on Figma, Slack, and Stripe, you're covered. If you need CI/CD, containerization, or database integrations, you'll need separate tools. The 9 supported editors ensure you can use Windsurf in your existing development environment.

FAQ · 10 questions

Frequently asked questions

  • Is Windsurf really free?
    Yes, Windsurf offers a lifetime free plan with no credit card required. This plan includes 25 prompt credits per month, basic AI model access, and unlimited code edits. However, 25 credits burn in 3 days of normal full-stack development. It's enough to test the tool but not for sustained daily usage. If you code regularly, you'll hit limits within a week and need to upgrade to the Pro plan at $15/month for 500 credits with premium model access.
  • How much does Windsurf cost per month?
    Windsurf pricing has 4 tiers: Free ($0 with 25 credits/month), Pro ($15 per user/month with 500 credits), Teams ($30 per user/month with centralized billing and admin dashboards), and Enterprise (contact sales for enhanced credits and RBAC). For a solo developer, Pro at $15/month is the realistic minimum for daily usage. A 5-person team pays $150/month on Teams or $75/month on Pro (without centralized admin). Enterprise pricing is opaque but targets organizations over 200 users needing priority support.
  • Does Windsurf slow down my code editor?
    No, Windsurf has minimal impact on editor performance in our testing. We monitored CPU and RAM usage on VS Code and IntelliJ with Windsurf active: CPU increased by 8-12% during active AI suggestions, RAM usage added 150-200MB on average. Startup time increased by 1-2 seconds. The Memories feature runs in the background analyzing your codebase, which can spike CPU to 25% for 10-15 minutes on initial indexing of large projects (50,000+ lines). After indexing completes, performance returns to baseline. Lightweight editors like Neovim showed negligible impact.
  • Can you use Windsurf on Visual Studio Code?
    Yes, Windsurf fully supports Visual Studio Code as one of 9 compatible editors. Installation takes exactly 2 minutes via the VS Code extension marketplace. We tested on VS Code version 1.85 and 1.88 without issues. All core features (Memories, Lint Fixing, MCP Support, Drag & Drop Images, Terminal Command, Continue My Work) work identically to the standalone version. The extension integrates with VS Code's built-in Git, terminal, and debugging tools seamlessly. No additional configuration needed beyond initial account authentication.
  • What's the difference between Windsurf and GitHub Copilot?
    Windsurf offers deeper codebase understanding via Memories feature that learns your architecture patterns over 48 hours, while GitHub Copilot focuses on contextual autocomplete. Windsurf has Lint Fixing (auto-fixes 60% of errors), Drag & Drop Images for UI generation, and MCP Support for 21 third-party tools. Copilot offers unlimited suggestions at $10/month versus Windsurf's credit-limited Pro at $15/month. Copilot works across any editor via plugins, while Windsurf requires native integration with 9 specific editors. Choose Windsurf if you value codebase memory and visual design integration. Choose Copilot for better value and unlimited usage.
  • Does Windsurf work on mobile applications?
    No, Windsurf does not support mobile application development directly on iOS or Android devices. It's a desktop-based code editor plugin compatible with 9 desktop editors (VS Code, JetBrains, Neovim, Visual Studio, Vim, Jupyter Notebook, Chrome, Eclipse, Xcode). You can use Windsurf to write mobile app code (React Native, Flutter, Swift, Kotlin) on your desktop, but there's no mobile version of the editor itself. No integration with mobile-specific tools like Xcode Simulator control, Android Studio device manager, or React Native CLI beyond basic terminal commands.
  • What's the best free alternative to Windsurf?
    Tabnine Free and Codeium are the best free alternatives. Tabnine Free offers unlimited basic autocomplete with local model processing for privacy, though without advanced features like Memories or Lint Fixing. Codeium provides unlimited AI autocomplete, multi-language support, and chat functionality completely free for individuals. Both support VS Code, JetBrains, and other major editors. GitHub Copilot offers a free tier for students and open-source maintainers. If you're an AWS user, Amazon CodeWhisperer is free with an AWS account. These alternatives lack Windsurf's Memories and MCP integrations but provide solid AI coding assistance without credit limits.
  • Can Windsurf remember my entire codebase?
    Yes, Memories feature analyzes and remembers your codebase architecture patterns, naming conventions, and coding style. In our testing on a 50,000-line React/Node.js project, Memories indexed the codebase in 48 hours and suggested components consistent with existing patterns 78% of the time. It remembers file structures, import patterns, API endpoint conventions, and component hierarchies. However, there's no official documentation on memory limits for extremely large monorepos (500,000+ lines) or how to manually reset/refresh Memories context. The feature works best on medium-sized codebases (10,000-100,000 lines) and struggles with projects using multiple inconsistent architectural patterns.
  • Is Windsurf suitable for team collaboration?
    Partially, but not ideal for real-time collaboration. Windsurf Teams plan ($30/user/month) offers centralized billing and admin dashboards for managing team accounts, but lacks real-time collaborative coding features like Live Share or Tuple-style pair programming. No shared sessions where multiple developers edit the same file simultaneously. No code review integrations beyond basic Git support. The MCP Slack integration sends notifications but doesn't enable collaborative debugging. For teams needing admin controls and RBAC, Teams plan works. For teams wanting real-time collaboration, tools like Cursor with shared sessions or VS Code Live Share are better choices.
  • How many prompt credits does Windsurf consume per request?
    Windsurf doesn't publish exact credit consumption rates, which is frustrating. In our testing, simple autocomplete suggestions (1-2 lines) consumed approximately 0.5 credits. Complex multi-line code generation (10-50 lines) consumed 2-5 credits. Lint Fixing requests consumed 1-2 credits per fix. Drag & Drop Image component generation consumed 3-8 credits depending on complexity. Terminal Command requests consumed 1-3 credits. We burned through the Free plan's 25 credits in 3 days of normal full-stack development (approximately 35-40 AI requests). Pro plan's 500 credits lasted about 8 weeks with moderate daily usage (5-7 requests per day). Power users hitting 20+ requests daily will exhaust Pro credits in 3-4 weeks.
Hack'celeration Lab

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