Best AI extensions for VS Code in 2026 (desktop, free and paid)

A lot of AI coding tools tried to replace VS Code this year. The smarter ones realized that VS Code already has a billion install-hours of muscle memory behind it and just shipped extensions instead. The eight best AI extensions for VS Code below are the ones that actually deliver: completion that does not get in the way, chat that knows what file you have open, and agent modes that can read and modify your repo without losing the plot.

These were tested on real codebases (Python, TypeScript, Go, Rust) across Mac, Windows, and Linux. The picks span proprietary and open source, with notes on whether the chosen model lives in the cloud, runs locally, or lets you pick. Each section explains where the extension shines, where it falls short, and what its pricing actually looks like in 2026.

What to look for in an AI VS Code extension

Quick comparison

ExtensionBest forFree tierStarting price/moStandout
GitHub CopilotDefault installFree for students/OSSAround $10 (Pro)Tight integration, Agent mode
ContinueOpen-source flexibilityYesFree (BYOK)Pick any model, fully open source
ClineAgent-mode workYes (BYOK)Token cost onlyBest in-VS Code agent for repo work
Sourcegraph CodyRepo-aware chatYesAround $9 (Pro)Code graph for monorepo understanding
TabnineEnterprise privacyYesAround $12 (Dev)Custom-trained on your repo, on-prem option
Codeium / WindsurfFree polished completionYes, generousAround $15 (Pro)Most generous free tier
Roo CodeCline fork with more knobsYes (BYOK)Token cost onlyMulti-mode prompts, custom personas
JetBrains AI AssistantJetBrains-native optionTrialAround $10Works inside JetBrains IDEs first

The extensions

1. GitHub Copilot, the default for a reason

Copilot is the most-installed AI coding extension by a wide margin, and the 2026 features keep it ahead for most users: agent mode that reads and modifies files, multi-file edits from a single prompt, model picker (Sonnet, GPT, Gemini), and tight Git integration that closes PRs and writes commit messages. The “Edit with Copilot” workflow is the smoothest in this list.

Where it falls short: token costs in agent mode can climb fast on heavy days. Some teams cannot use it for compliance reasons.

Pricing: Free for verified students, teachers, and open-source maintainers. Pro starts around $10 per month, Business around $19, Enterprise above.

Platforms: VS Code, JetBrains IDEs, Visual Studio, plus the github.com web editor.

Download: GitHub Copilot, Marketplace listing

Bottom line: The default install for almost every developer in 2026. If you already pay for GitHub, this is the simplest path to AI in the editor.

2. Continue, the open-source middle layer

Continue is the open-source extension most teams reach for when they want choice. Plug in OpenAI, Anthropic, Mistral, Ollama (local), or any OpenAI-compatible endpoint. The chat, autocomplete, and agent flows all respect your model choice. The 2026 release added stronger agent capabilities and better context retrieval.

Where it falls short: configuration takes more upfront work than Copilot. Some advanced features need a stronger model than the free tiers offer.

Pricing: Free and open source. You pay for whichever model API you point it at; pointing it at Ollama is free.

Platforms: VS Code and JetBrains IDEs.

Download: Continue, Marketplace listing

Bottom line: The right pick for teams that want full control over model choice, or developers who already self-host an Ollama box and want to use it inside the editor.

3. Cline, the in-editor agent

Cline (formerly Claude Dev) is the agent-mode extension that turned VS Code into a place where you can hand a task to the model and watch it work. It reads files, runs commands in the integrated terminal (with your approval), updates files, and posts progress as it goes. The pause-and-redirect UX is the best in the agentic category.

Where it falls short: token metering means a single large refactor can run into real money. Heavy use without a clear plan can produce sprawling changes that need careful review.

Pricing: Free extension, you pay only the underlying model API tokens (Anthropic, OpenAI, OpenRouter, Bedrock).

Platforms: VS Code.

Download: Cline, Marketplace listing

Bottom line: The best fit for developers who want agent-mode work inside the editor rather than a separate Claude Code or Cursor window.

4. Sourcegraph Cody, the repo-aware option

Cody’s strength is the code graph behind it. The extension uses a Sourcegraph-style code index to resolve references across a large monorepo and feeds the model precise context rather than dumping whole files. For codebases over a couple of hundred thousand lines, the difference shows up in answer quality.

Where it falls short: best results on Sourcegraph-indexed repos, which means either Sourcegraph Cloud or a self-hosted Sourcegraph instance. The free tier is workable, the paid plan unlocks more model choice.

Pricing: Free tier with caps. Pro starts around $9 per month per user.

Platforms: VS Code, JetBrains IDEs.

Download: Sourcegraph Cody

Bottom line: A clear winner on large monorepos. Less differentiated for small or single-package codebases.

5. Tabnine, the enterprise-privacy pick

Tabnine has stayed close to the enterprise market for years and built features around it: an on-prem deployment, custom models trained on your repo, strict no-retention guarantees, and SOC 2 / SAML / SCIM that match what compliance teams want. The completion quality on common languages is solid; the chat works well on private codebases that other tools cannot index.

Where it falls short: cost scales with seats and the most useful features are gated to higher tiers. The community edition is leaner than Continue or Codeium.

Pricing: Free tier. Dev plan around $12 per user per month, Enterprise above.

Platforms: VS Code, JetBrains IDEs, Visual Studio, Neovim, more.

Download: Tabnine, Marketplace listing

Bottom line: The right pick when compliance, on-prem, or custom-trained models are non-negotiable.

6. Codeium / Windsurf, the most generous free tier

Codeium’s individual free tier is the most generous in this list: unlimited completion, decent chat, multi-file edits, no credit card. The Windsurf editor is the standalone IDE built on the same backend, but the VS Code extension is the right fit if you do not want to leave the editor you already know.

Where it falls short: the corporate tier is needed for the deeper agent features and bigger context windows. The most aggressive feature work has moved to the Windsurf editor.

Pricing: Free for individual use. Pro around $15 per month for additional features.

Platforms: VS Code, JetBrains IDEs, Vim/Neovim, Eclipse.

Download: Codeium, Marketplace listing

Bottom line: The most reasonable “free forever” option if Copilot’s pricing is the blocker.

7. Roo Code, the Cline fork with knobs

Roo Code is the community fork of Cline with more customization: multiple prompt modes, custom personas, finer control over which actions need approval, and a slightly different default behavior on long tasks. Teams that have outgrown Cline’s defaults tend to land here.

Where it falls short: power-user tool. If you do not need the extra knobs, Cline is simpler.

Pricing: Free extension, model API costs only.

Platforms: VS Code.

Download: Roo Code

Bottom line: A drop-in upgrade from Cline for users who want more control over the agent loop.

8. JetBrains AI Assistant, the JetBrains-native pick

For developers who live in IntelliJ, PyCharm, GoLand, or Rider, JetBrains AI Assistant is the first-party option that knows the JetBrains code intelligence. There is a VS Code extension version, but its strength is in the JetBrains IDEs where the chat and completion can reason about types, refactors, and project structure with the JetBrains language services.

Where it falls short: not the right pick if you primarily use VS Code. The trial period is short and some advanced features land on the higher tier.

Pricing: Trial, then around $10 per user per month for AI Pro.

Platforms: All JetBrains IDEs.

Download: JetBrains AI Assistant

Bottom line: A reasonable pick for JetBrains-loyal teams. Cross-IDE shops should default to Copilot or Continue.

How to pick the right one

Most developers settle on a primary completion extension (Copilot, Codeium, or Continue) plus an agent extension (Cline or Roo Code) for bigger tasks. Stacking three or more usually means conflicting hotkeys and slowed startup.

FAQ

What is the best free AI extension for VS Code?

Codeium’s individual tier is the most generous fully-free option for completion and basic chat. Continue is the most flexible if you already have an Ollama box or an Anthropic API key. Cline is free as an extension if you already pay for an API plan.

Can I run an AI coding extension on Linux?

Yes. All eight of these extensions run on Linux via VS Code (or VSCodium). The local model paths (Continue + Ollama, Cline + Ollama) work especially well on Linux machines with a GPU.

Is GitHub Copilot worth the price?

For most professional developers, yes. The completion quality, the agent mode, and the close integration with PRs, commits, and reviews all save real time. The free tier for students and OSS maintainers is one of the more generous deals in developer tooling.

Does my code train the model?

It depends on the extension and your plan. Copilot Business, Tabnine Enterprise, and Sourcegraph Cody Pro all advertise no training on your code. Free tiers of some extensions reserve the right to use your data; read each extension’s privacy page before committing a sensitive codebase.