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MiniMax pricing spans three separate products under one brand, and that is exactly why it confuses people. The Hailuo AI video generator runs from a free tier up to $199.99/month, the MiniMax API charges per token from as little as $0.15 per million on M2.5, and the developer Token Plan starts at $10/month. Whichever one you came for, the numbers below are current as of June 2026.
The naming is the first hurdle. Hailuo AI is MiniMax’s consumer video app, MiniMax is the company and its API brand, and searches like “hailuo minimax pricing” mix the two together. This guide separates all three so you can find your exact plan, see what a single video or a million tokens actually costs, and decide which tier is worth paying for. Prices here move often, so treat every figure as a starting point and confirm at the source before you buy.
- Hailuo AI video plans run from a free tier to $199.99/month (Max), with paid plans listing at $14.99 to $199.99 and a limited-time promo cutting the entry Standard tier to $7.99/month.
- Paid plans include 1,000 to 20,000 monthly credits, enough for roughly 40 to 900 videos at economical settings; credits reset monthly and do not roll over.
- The MiniMax API bills per token, from $0.15/$1.15 per million on MiniMax M2.5 to $0.40/$2.20 on M1; the flagship MiniMax M3 sits at $0.30/$1.20 during a 50% launch discount.
- The developer Token Plan starts at $10/month (Starter) and scales to $50/month (Max), with faster Highspeed tiers sold annually only from $400/year.
- All paid Hailuo plans remove the watermark, add commercial use rights, and bundle frontier models like Veo 3.1, Sora 2, and Nano Banana Pro inside one subscription.
MiniMax sells three things, and each is priced on its own logic. The Hailuo AI video generator uses monthly credit subscriptions aimed at creators, from free up to $199.99/month. The MiniMax API is pay-as-you-go per token for developers, starting at $0.15 per million tokens. The Token Plan, sometimes called the Coding Plan, is a flat developer subscription from $10/month that swaps metered billing for fixed request quotas.
If you just want to make AI videos, you want Hailuo. If you are wiring MiniMax models into your own software, you want the API or the Token Plan. The sections below cover all three, with the consumer video plans first since that is what most people searching for “hailuo minimax pricing” actually need.
Hailuo AI runs on credits. Every subscription hands you a monthly credit pool, and each video spends credits based on its resolution, length, and model. A short 768p clip is the cheapest output, while higher resolutions and longer durations burn through credits faster, so the video counts below assume the most economical settings. Credits reset each month and unused ones expire, which matters a lot when you pick a tier.
Here are the current Hailuo plans, verified June 13, 2026 on the official Hailuo subscription page. The list prices below reflect the standard monthly rate; a running limited-time promotion currently discounts the lower tiers, and the page shows the promo price you actually pay at checkout.
| Plan | List / month | Current promo | Monthly credits | Videos/month (approx) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | N/A | Trial credits | Trial only |
| Standard | $14.99 | $7.99 | 1,000 | ~40 |
| Pro | $54.99 | $24.99 | 4,500 | ~180 |
| Master | $94.99 | $63.99 | 10,000 | ~400 |
| Ultra | $124.99 | No promo | 12,000 | ~480 |
| Max | $199.99 | No promo | 20,000 | ~900 |
The Free plan is fine for trying things out, but it gives you limited trial credits, keeps the watermark, restricts you to Hailuo’s own models, and sits at the lowest queue priority. The Standard plan lists at $14.99/month and is currently discounted to $7.99 on a limited-time promo that the company says reverts to $14.99 once it ends. It includes 1,000 credits, around 40 six-second 768p videos or about a dozen 1080p clips, removes the watermark, and adds commercial rights, though it caps video length at six seconds and runs tasks one at a time.
The Pro plan lists at $54.99/month, currently $24.99 on promo, and bumps you to 4,500 credits, roughly 180 economical videos, plus ten-second 1080p output and two clips rendering in parallel. The Master plan lists at $94.99/month, currently $63.99, with 10,000 credits and around 400 videos. This is the band most regular creators land on, since 4,500 to 10,000 credits is enough to publish a steady stream of clips without rationing every generation.
The Ultra plan costs $124.99/month for 12,000 credits, about 480 videos, and adds unlimited use of the older Hailuo 01 model at no credit cost. The Max plan, at $199.99/month for 20,000 credits and roughly 900 videos, is the most comprehensive tier, with unlimited access to both the Hailuo 01 and 02 models plus the agent. Both top tiers keep video output at up to ten-second 1080p; the 2K and 4K “unlimited” perks Hailuo advertises apply to the bundled image models, not the video clips themselves.
The credit-to-video ratio is the number that actually decides value. At the cheapest settings, a six-second 768p clip costs roughly 25 credits, so 1,000 credits yields about 40 videos. Step up to ten-second 768p and you halve that count; jump to six-second 1080p and a single Standard plan stretches to only about 12 clips. That is why the “videos per month” figures swing so widely, and why creators who work mostly in 1080p should size up at least one tier beyond what the headline credit number suggests.
The bigger story is what each paid plan adds beyond Hailuo’s own video model. Paid tiers bundle access to Veo 3.1, Sora 2, and Seedance 2.0, and from Pro upward you also get image models like Nano Banana Pro, Nano Banana 2, Seedream, and GPT Image. That turns Hailuo from a single video tool into a multi-model creative suite. For a broader look at how it stacks up against rivals, see our roundup of the best AI video generators.
The MiniMax API is pay-as-you-go, billed per million tokens with no base subscription required. Pricing varies by model, and the newer M-series models are aggressively cheap compared to Western frontier labs. The figures below are for standard context (prompts under roughly 200k tokens); some models use tiered pricing that rises for very long prompts.
| Model | Input /1M | Output /1M | Context window | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MiniMax M2.5 | $0.15 | $1.15 | 205K | Cheapest coding workhorse |
| MiniMax-01 | $0.20 | $1.10 | 1M | Long-context value |
| MiniMax M2 | $0.255 | $1.00 | 205K | Balanced general use |
| MiniMax M2.7 | $0.279 | $1.20 | 205K | Refined mid-tier |
| MiniMax M2.1 | $0.29 | $0.95 | 205K | Cheap output |
| MiniMax M3 | $0.30 | $1.20 | 1M | Flagship, long context |
| MiniMax M1 | $0.40 | $2.20 | 1M | Older reasoning model |
MiniMax M2.5 is the cheapest entry point at $0.15 input and $1.15 output per million tokens, and it remains a strong value pick for coding workloads; we covered it in detail in our MiniMax M2.5 review. It carries a 205K-token context window and comes in two speed variants, with the standard-speed option billing output as low as $0.90 on some resellers and the high-speed variant landing at $1.15. Either way, you are paying a fraction of frontier rates for capable output.
The flagship MiniMax M3 carries a 1M-token context window and sits at $0.30/$1.20 thanks to a 50% launch discount, with a list price of $0.60/$2.40 once the promotion ends. That makes it one of the cheapest million-token-context models you can call, and a natural pick for agents that need to hold large codebases or long documents in a single prompt. If you run agentic coding workloads, another open-weight option worth pricing out is Nex-N2-Pro, a 397B MoE model built for long-horizon coding.
You can also access these models through resellers. OpenRouter MiniMax pricing mirrors the official rates closely, listing M3 at $0.30/$1.20 and routing your requests to whichever provider can handle your prompt size. On a few models OpenRouter even undercuts the official sheet, since it surfaces the cheaper standard-speed variants. Pricing this low puts MiniMax in the same budget bracket as DeepSeek, well under what you would pay for comparable output from OpenAI or Anthropic.
For developers who would rather pay a flat fee than meter every call, MiniMax offers the Token Plan, also marketed as the Coding Plan. It bundles a powerful coding model with speech, image, music, and video generation under a single API key and one bill, with quotas measured in requests rather than tokens.
| Tier | Monthly | Annual | Requests / 5 hrs | Billing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter | $10 | $100 | ~1,500 | Monthly or annual |
| Plus | $20 | $200 | ~4,500 | Monthly or annual |
| Max | $50 | $500 | ~15,000 | Monthly or annual |
| Plus Highspeed | N/A | $400 | ~4,500 | Annual only |
| Max Highspeed | N/A | $800 | ~15,000 | Annual only |
| Ultra Highspeed | N/A | $1,500 | ~30,000 | Annual only |
The three standard tiers bill monthly or annually and are powered by MiniMax’s latest coding model. Starter at $10/month suits light testing, Plus at $20/month is the sweet spot for one busy developer, and Max at $50/month covers heavy daily coding with about 15,000 requests every five hours. Annual billing gives you 2 months free, so the effective Starter price drops to roughly $8.33/month on the $100 yearly plan.
The faster Highspeed variants are sold on annual plans only, with no monthly option. They run $400/year for Plus Highspeed, $800/year for Max Highspeed, and $1,500/year for Ultra Highspeed, which lifts the ceiling to around 30,000 requests per window. If you are weighing this against rival developer subscriptions, our Grok pricing and Mistral AI pricing breakdowns are useful comparison points.
On raw cost, MiniMax is one of the cheapest capable model families you can buy, on both the video and the API side. The table below puts its flagship token rates next to the budget and frontier options developers actually compare it against, and the gap is stark.
| Model | Input /1M | Output /1M | Context | Tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MiniMax M2.5 | $0.15 | $1.15 | 205K | Budget |
| MiniMax M3 | $0.30 | $1.20 | 1M | Budget flagship |
| DeepSeek V4 | $0.435 | $0.87 | 1M | Budget |
| Claude Opus 4.8 | $5.00 | $25.00 | 200K | Frontier |
MiniMax M2.5 inputs cost roughly a third of DeepSeek V4 and about 33 times less than Claude Opus 4.8. For high-volume, cost-sensitive workloads that gap compounds fast, which is why MiniMax keeps showing up in budget coding setups. For the full landscape of how these models rank on quality and price, see our guide to the best AI models.
On video, the real value is the bundling. A single Hailuo plan now hands you Veo 3.1 and Sora 2, models that cost far more to run standalone through Google or OpenAI, alongside Hailuo’s own engine and a stack of image models. The trade-off is the credit system, which forces you to ration generations and watch your monthly balance, and pricing that has crept upward as those frontier models were added. If you mainly want polished short clips and like having several video engines in one place, it is hard to beat on price.
Juggling Hailuo credits, an API key, and a separate Coding Plan adds up fast, both in money and in mental overhead. If what you really want is access to strong models without metering every generation, Fello AI gives you Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Grok, and DeepSeek under one flat subscription on Mac and iPhone. That means one price for many models, including the budget Chinese models MiniMax competes with, with no credit packs to top up.
For creators, that removes the constant “do I have enough credits” worry. For everyday users, it means you can switch from a coding question to a research task to a writing job without changing apps or paying three separate bills. You can try it from the App Store and see whether one subscription beats stacking several.
MiniMax pricing is cheap by design, whether you are generating video or calling the API. For video, the Hailuo Standard plan, currently $7.99/month on promo, is the sensible starting point, with Pro the upgrade most regular creators land on. For developers, MiniMax M2.5 at $0.15/$1.15 per million tokens is the value pick, while the $10 Token Plan suits anyone who wants a flat monthly bill. Because these prices change often, and the lower Hailuo tiers are running a temporary promo, confirm the current numbers on the official MiniMax pricing page before you subscribe.
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