01Plans
Use the full handoff loop before you pay.
Free
$0
- 500 saves per month
- 50 saves per day
- 2,000 stored artifacts
- 10 MB of revision content
Pro
$1 per month
or $10 billed yearly
- 10,000 saves per month
- 1,000 saves per day
- 50,000 stored artifacts
- 250 MB of revision content
Limits shown here are the hosted defaults. An operator can lower or raise deployment limits through configuration, so your signed-in usage screen is the final source for the limits applied to your account.
02Usage
A save is a new artifact or a new revision.
Creating an artifact consumes one daily and one monthly save. Revising an existing artifact also consumes a save because it preserves another immutable revision. Reading, searching, reviewing, preparing a destination representation, and recording a copy do not create a new revision.
The stored-artifact limit counts items, while storage capacity counts the Markdown held across revisions. Deleting an artifact removes its related revisions and releases item and content capacity. Revoking an unused OAuth connection is still good account hygiene even though it does not consume a save.
03Billing
Monthly flexibility or two months saved yearly.
Pro is $1 when billed monthly or $10 when billed yearly. Applicable taxes can be calculated during checkout. Billing is handled through Stripe, and DraftRelay does not ask you to place full payment-card details inside an artifact.
You can manage the subscription from the signed-in account area. Deleting the hosted account cancels an active subscription as part of account deletion. No uptime guarantee, consulting support, or team administration is included in these individual plans unless it is stated in a separate written agreement.
04Local
The open-source local edition has no hosted subscription.
The MIT-licensed local server runs on your computer and stores artifacts in SQLite. You provide the machine, backups, updates, and security boundary. It does not include hosted synchronization, hosted OAuth access, or an operated database. Start with the open-source guide if that tradeoff fits your work better.