Editorial take
Why it stands out
ReadMe should be framed as a developer hub platform, not only as a docs site. The pricing story only makes sense when documentation quality and onboarding outcomes are strategically important.
Tool profile
Developer hub platform for API docs, guides, changelogs, and usage surfaces, with public pricing that now includes AI features and developer-dashboard metering.
Developer hubs
ReadMe belongs in the catalog because it remains one of the most recognizable developer-hub platforms for companies that treat documentation as part of product experience rather than a support afterthought. The official site positions it around docs, API reference, changelogs, AI features, and a broader developer dashboard layer. That matters because ReadMe is not simply a static documentation renderer. It is a hosted developer-facing surface for onboarding, self-serve discovery, and API adoption.
It also deserves inclusion because the pricing is public and commercially legible. The checked official pricing page currently shows Starter at $0 per month, Business at $250 per month, and Enterprise at $3,000+ per month, with a 14-day free trial and separate Developer Dashboard metering at $100 per month for 5 million logs plus $10 per additional 1 million logs. That combination makes ReadMe especially useful to compare against simpler docs platforms. Buyers can immediately see that they are paying for a broader hub and engagement layer, not just a theme for markdown pages.
Quick fit
Editorial take
ReadMe should be framed as a developer hub platform, not only as a docs site. The pricing story only makes sense when documentation quality and onboarding outcomes are strategically important.
What it does well
Primary use cases
Fit notes
Pricing snapshot
ReadMe currently offers Starter at $0/month, Business at $250/month, and Enterprise at $3,000+/month. The official pricing page also lists a 14-day free trial and Developer Dashboard pricing at $100/month for 5 million logs plus $10 per additional 1 million logs.