Pricing reference
Mediar Pro is not a plan tier. It is the largest of three credit packs.
People search for "mediar pro" expecting a Professional subscription that sits between the free tier and Enterprise, the way Notion or Linear or Skyvern lay out their plans. Mediar does not have one. The public pricing page lists three options and none of them is called Pro. The word shows up in exactly one place inside the product, and once you see it, the search makes sense.
Direct answer (verified 2026-05-08)
Mediar Pro is a $100 credit pack, not a plan.
Inside the dashboard at app.mediar.ai there is a credits dropdown with three options: Starter (30 credits, $15), Standard (120 credits, $50, badged "BEST"), and Pro (300 credits, $100). One credit is about one minute of workflow runtime, so the Pro pack buys about 5 hours of execution at $0.33 per minute, which is the cheapest per-minute rate Mediar sells.
Verified against the live pricing page at mediar.ai/pricing and the source file at apps/web/src/lib/credits.ts on 8 May 2026.
Why the "Pro" expectation is the wrong shape for Mediar
Most modern SaaS products organize their pricing around a Pro tier: a separate monthly subscription that unlocks seats, storage, SSO, or features. Skyvern is laid out that way. Notion is laid out that way. UiPath is laid out that way. The keyword "mediar pro" lands on a product that is shaped differently. Mediar charges for runtime: minutes of workflow execution, plus an optional managed-build subscription for teams that want us to do the implementation. Pro is the name of the prepay bucket that gives you the steepest volume discount, and that is all it is.
Pro tier on most SaaS • a separate monthly subscription • higher seat count • premium support tier • SSO, audit logs, RBAC • priced 2-5x the entry plan • billed forever, every month
- Recurring monthly fee
- Unlocks seats, SSO, RBAC, audit logs
- Priced 2-5x the entry plan
- You assume Mediar follows this pattern
The three actual plans, named correctly
The pricing page at mediar.ai/pricing has three cards. None of them is called Pro. If you came here looking for the closest thing to "the version a serious team buys," the honest answer depends on whether you want to build the automation yourself (Free) or have us build it (Turnkey).
Free
Self-hosted or pay-as-you-go. The open-source Terminator engine on GitHub plus the desktop agent. Unlimited Gemini 3 Pro and unlimited Claude Code on the build side. You only pay after a workflow is in production, then $0.75 per minute of execution. This is what most teams start on.
Turnkey Service
$500 per month. We build the workflow for you: dedicated engineering on the implementation, managed deployment, priority bug fixes, and a monthly report. Use it when you want a working automation instead of a tool.
Enterprise
Custom price. Everything in Turnkey plus on-premise deployment, SLA guarantees, custom package configuration, and a dedicated account manager. The configuration call is at /turnkey?tier=enterprise.
Where the word "Pro" lives in the source
The Mediar repository has one file that defines the credit packs the dashboard sells. It is read by the credits dropdown component, the Stripe checkout endpoint, and the Stripe webhook that mirrors a successful purchase back into the account balance. The Pro pack is the third entry.
Note that the popular flag is on Standard, not on Pro. The dashboard renders that flag as a small black "BEST" badge. Standard wins the badge because most new users buy in 2-hour chunks. Pro is the cheapest per-minute, but it asks you to commit to 5 hours up front.
The math, end to end
One credit is about one minute of workflow execution. Three numbers fall out of that.
Pro pack
$0
300 credits, one-time
Runtime included
0 hr
about 1 min per credit
Discount vs Starter
0%
$0.33 vs $0.50 per credit
Three credit packs in the dashboard dropdown ============================================ Starter 30 credits → $15 → $0.50/credit → 30 min Standard 120 credits → $50 → $0.42/credit → 2 hr ← "BEST" Pro 300 credits → $100 → $0.33/credit → 5 hr Same code path, same workflow runner, same Gemini model. The only thing that changes is how many minutes you prepay.
“The Pro pack saves the most per credit. The dashboard still nudges most new users to Standard because most teams buy 2 hours at a time, not 5.”
credits.ts and CreditsDisplay.tsx
When the Pro pack is the right choice
A simple decision rule. Estimate the workflow runtime you expect to consume in the next 30 days. Multiply by 60 to get credits. If the answer is below 30, the Starter pack covers it. If it is between 30 and 120, Standard is the cleanest fit. If it is above 120, the Pro pack is the right shape because the per-credit price drops by 34 percent against Starter and 21 percent against Standard, and you avoid topping up twice in the same month.
Two examples to anchor those bands. A team running a single SAP B1 nightly close that takes 8 minutes per night burns about 240 credits per month, which lands squarely in the Pro band. A team piloting a single 30-minute claim intake workflow run twice a day burns about 1,800 credits per month, which sits well above one Pro pack and is the natural transition point to either custom credit purchases through /api/credits/checkout or the Turnkey program at /pricing.
The Pro pack is not a feature gate. Buying it does not unlock SSO, audit logs, on-premise deployment, or any other capability. Those are Enterprise-tier configurations, configured per contract under /turnkey?tier=enterprise.
A note on the "Gemini 3 Pro" line on the pricing page
The Free card on mediar.ai/pricing lists "Unlimited Gemini 3 Pro" as one of its checks. That refers to Google's Gemini 3 Pro model, which Mediar calls during the recording pipeline for step analysis and re-labeling. Pro in "Gemini 3 Pro" is Google's tier name for the model. Pro in the credit pack is Mediar's tier name for the prepay bucket. Both share three letters and nothing else. If a search engine collapsed them into the same phrase to land you here, that is the cause.
Want to size the right pack for your workflow?
Book a 25-minute call. We will walk through your target workflow, estimate runtime, and tell you whether the Pro pack, the Turnkey program, or just pay-as-you-go is the cleaner fit.
Frequently asked questions
Is there a Mediar Pro subscription plan?
No. The public pricing page at mediar.ai/pricing lists exactly three plans as of 8 May 2026: Free (open source plus pay-as-you-go at $0.75 per minute of execution), Turnkey Service at $500 per month, and Enterprise at custom pricing. There is no Pro plan, no Pro tier, and no Pro subscription. The only place the word Pro appears as a tier label inside the product is the largest of three credit packs in the dashboard at app.mediar.ai, defined in apps/web/src/lib/credits.ts.
How much does the Mediar Pro credit pack cost?
$100 for 300 credits. One credit is roughly one minute of workflow execution, so $100 buys about 5 hours of runtime. The effective rate is $0.33 per credit. That is the cheapest per-credit rate Mediar sells: Starter is $15 for 30 credits ($0.50 per credit), Standard is $50 for 120 credits ($0.42 per credit), Pro is $100 for 300 credits ($0.33 per credit). The 34 percent discount is applied automatically at checkout when you pick the Pro pack from the credits dropdown.
Why isn't the Pro pack labeled 'BEST' or 'most popular' in the dashboard?
Because the recorder source intentionally puts the popular flag on the middle Standard pack, not on Pro. In credits.ts, only the Standard pack carries `popular: true`, which the CreditsDisplay component renders as a small black 'BEST' badge next to the credits number. The Pro pack saves more money per credit, but most early users buy Standard first, so the dashboard nudges new users toward the middle option. If you already know you will burn 5 hours of runtime in the next month, Pro is the cheaper choice.
How do credits relate to the $0.75 per minute number on the pricing page?
$0.75 per minute is the headline pay-as-you-go rate published on mediar.ai/pricing. The credit packs are the prepaid path, and the prepaid math runs cheaper because you commit to a chunk of runtime up front. Inside the codebase, the credits comment block puts the marginal cost between $0.33 (Pro) and $0.50 (Starter) per minute. The headline number protects unit economics for ad-hoc usage; the credit packs reward regular usage. Both bill the same workflow runner, the same Gemini step pipeline, and the same Windows accessibility-API executor.
Where exactly does the Pro pack live on screen?
After you sign in at app.mediar.ai, the top right of the dashboard shows your current credit balance. Click it and a dropdown opens labeled 'Buy More' with the three packs underneath: 30, 120, and 300. The 300-credit row is the Pro pack. Clicking it kicks the checkout endpoint at /api/credits/checkout, which mirrors the package against CREDIT_PACKAGES from credits.ts and creates a Stripe session. After Stripe completes, the Stripe webhook at /api/webhooks/stripe credits the account.
Can I get a custom credit pack larger than Pro?
Yes, two ways. The /api/credits/checkout endpoint accepts a custom USD amount and falls back to the Pro rate of three credits per dollar via calculateCreditsFromPurchase, so $250 turns into 750 credits at the same $0.33 effective rate. The other path is the Turnkey program at $500 per month, which converts the program fee into credits with a bonus and is the right shape if you want a multi-month commitment instead of a one-time top-up. The Turnkey card on /pricing links to /turnkey?tier=b2b.
Does buying the Pro pack include a Windows VM, or do I bring my own?
Both options exist. The Pro pack alone is workflow runtime on whatever Windows session you connect; it does not pre-pay a VM. Mediar also exposes managed VMs sized Starter, Standard, and Performance (Standard_D2s_v3 through D8s_v3). Each VM has a one-time launch cost and a per-minute running cost, both denominated in the same credits, defined under VM_COSTS in credits.ts. Standard_D4s_v3 is the recommended default at 0.4 credits per running minute. If you bring your own Windows machine, only the workflow runtime costs apply.
Why does the public pricing page say 'Unlimited Gemini 3 Pro' if there's no Pro plan?
That phrase refers to Google's Gemini 3 Pro model, which Mediar uses for step analysis and labeling during the recording pipeline. It is the AI model name, not a Mediar plan name. The Free row on /pricing lists 'Unlimited Gemini 3 Pro' alongside 'Unlimited Claude Code' to signal that you are not metered on inference cost during build time. The Pro in 'Gemini 3 Pro' is Google's tier for the model. The Pro in the credit pack is Mediar's. They are unrelated.