Try GOLD - Free
Cutting-edge AI Was Thought to Get Cheaper. It's Costlier Now
Mint New Delhi
|September 01, 2025
As artificial intelligence got smarter, it was supposed to become too cheap to meter. It's proving to be anything but.
Developers who buy AI by the barrel, for apps that do things like make software or analyze documents, are discovering their bills are higher than expected—and growing.
What's driving up costs? The latest AI models are doing more "thinking," especially when used for deep research, AI agents and coding. So while the price of a unit of AI, known as a token, continues to drop, the number of tokens needed to accomplish many tasks is skyrocketing.
It's the opposite of what many analysts and experts predicted even a few months ago. That has set off a new debate in the tech world about who the AI winners and losers will be.
"The arms race for who can make the smartest thing has resulted in a race for who can make the most expensive thing," says Theo Browne, chief executive of T3 Chat.
Browne should know. His service allows people to access dozens of different AI models in one place. He can calculate, across thousands of user queries, his relative costs for the various models.
Penny wise, pound-foolish
Remember, AI training and AI inference are different. Training those huge models continues to demand ever more costly processing, delivered by those AI supercomputers you've probably heard about. But getting answers out of existing models—inference—should be getting cheaper fast.
Sure enough, the cost of inference is going down by a factor of 10 every year, says Ben Cottier, a former AI engineer who is now a researcher at Epoch AI, a not-for-profit research organization that has received funding from OpenAI in the past.
This story is from the September 01, 2025 edition of Mint New Delhi.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi
Swadeshi or not? Govt to audit 'Made-in-India' tags
The government plans to verify whether products labelled as 'Made in India' meet domestic production criteria amid concerns that several such items do not qualify for the tag, according to two people aware of the matter.
2 mins
September 15, 2025

Mint New Delhi
Tata Int'l to tie up with Japanese, Swiss firms
Tata International Ltd will invest $100 million to form two joint ventures with the Japanese conglomerate Mitsubishi Corp. and the Switzerland-based commodities trader Mercuria, as the $3.6 billion privately held trading business of Tata Sons seeks to scale up global operations.
2 mins
September 15, 2025

Mint New Delhi
King Gold Reigns in Retail Loan Country
Gold loans surge on higher prices, narrowing quick loan options
2 mins
September 15, 2025

Mint New Delhi
Noel Tata's new leadership plan for Tata Sons fizzles
Tata Trusts chair Noel Tata sounded out a few top executives about a potential new leadership structure for Tata Sons Pvt. Ltd, but the plan stalled after resistance from some of the trustees, a person aware of the matter said.
2 mins
September 15, 2025

Mint New Delhi
Iron ore miners, steel firms tussle over export duty
India's largest iron ore miners and steelmakers have locked horns over a potential government move to impose an export duty on low-grade iron ore, with the former seeking free exports while the steel industry wants to discourage such shipments.
3 mins
September 15, 2025
Mint New Delhi
Why super seniors must file tax this yr
I'm a super senior with ₹7.8 lakh FD interest, ₹4,927 SB interest, and SCSS account. Wife (74) got bank interest of ₹5.45 lakh, and ₹2.64 lakh rent in FY25. We don't have any other investment. What's our ITR liability? —Ramasubramanian
1 min
September 15, 2025

Mint New Delhi
India weighs models to tap $1-tn green funds as 2030 goal nears
The government is holding consultations on ways to mobilize about $1 trillion in green finance to boost investments into clean energy as the 2030 deadline for 500 gigawatts of renewable capacity nears, according to two people aware of the discussions.
2 mins
September 15, 2025

Mint New Delhi
The market's riskier than it used to be—and investors love it
Investors have a strange relationship with risk. On the one hand, they want it: Risk brings reward when it works out. On the other hand, unrewarded risk is the very last thing anyone wants.
3 mins
September 15, 2025
Mint New Delhi
Tractor sales set for 10% rise in FY26
According to TMA, the total domestic tractor sales grew 7.3% in FY25 was driven by factors such as a good monsoon
1 min
September 15, 2025
Mint New Delhi
Why stock prices of mutual fund service providers are declining
Since 1 January, shares of RTAs like KFin and Cams have dropped 28% and 24%, respectively
2 mins
September 15, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size