Best AI Coding Tools 2026 — Honest Picks From Shipping 3 SaaS Solo
Claude Code, Cursor, Antigravity, Windsurf, Copilot — honest picks from a solo founder shipping 3 production AI SaaS. What I actually use, what I dropped.
Most “best AI coding tools” posts in 2026 are written by people who don’t ship. This one isn’t.
I’m Ravi. I’ve shipped three production AI SaaS solo — Prism (an OpenAI-compatible AI gateway competing with Portkey and Helicone), Citare (AI-search visibility tracker across five engines), and BatchWise (an Indian compliance marketplace). All live in production. The tools below are what I’ve actually used to ship them, in the order I’d recommend today.
I’m also going to tell you which tool I dropped two weeks ago and why — because that story is the most useful one in this post, and it’s the one no other “best AI coding tools” article will give you.
TL;DR — pick by job, not by leaderboard
| Your dominant job | Use this | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Complex multi-file work, backend logic, long-context refactors | Claude Code | $100/mo Max → $200/mo Max (or API pay-go) |
| Daily IDE work, fast edits, tab completion | Cursor (or VSCode + Claude Code, which I prefer) | $20/mo (Pro) |
| Greenfield agentic feature work (until ~May 2026) | Antigravity — see the cautionary tale below | Free during preview |
| Locked into JetBrains / Visual Studio at work | GitHub Copilot | $10–19/mo |
| You want one tool for everything | There isn’t one. Combine 2. | varies |
My actual stack right now
Worth stating upfront so you can calibrate everything below:
- Editor: plain VSCode. No Cursor, no Windsurf.
- Primary AI: Claude Code (CLI) on the $200/month Anthropic Max plan. It does the heavy lifting.
- Was using: Antigravity for the last several months. Dropped it ~2 weeks ago after the May 2026 redesign. More on that below.
- Provider account fallbacks: ChatGPT and Gemini, for second opinions and specific tasks.
I’m not the typical “Cursor power user” you read about. I tried Cursor, didn’t stick. The VSCode-plus-Claude-Code combination has been more productive for the kind of work I do — heavier on architecture decisions, lighter on tab completion. Your mileage will vary based on what you’re building.
My methodology — what I actually tested
I’m not a reviewer; I’m a founder. The “tests” below come from actual production work. The numbers are real, pulled directly from each codebase:
- Citare (the biggest of the three) — ~76,000 lines of TypeScript across ~600 files, shipped solo in 12 days from first commit. 130 pages + 83 API routes, 22 Postgres tables, 37 MCP tools exposed to AI agents + a 5-stage Brand Radar pipeline (KG builder → query drafter → Sonnet dispatcher → Cloudflare Browser renderer → Opus parser). Integrates 5 AI search engines (ChatGPT, Google AI Overview, Gemini, Claude, Perplexity) plus GSC, GA4, Bing Webmaster Tools, DataForSEO, OpenPageRank, SerpAPI. Built almost entirely in Claude Code; Antigravity for some early scaffolding.
- Prism (Ssimplifi) — ~19,200 lines of TypeScript (frontend, dashboard, Cloudflare edge worker) plus ~12,000 lines of Python running the API gateway, three-layer caching, multi-provider routing, observability, and policy/governance. 93 TS files, 227 commits, 48 days from first commit to live production with Pro/Team paid plans. Same tool mix.
- BatchWise — compliance marketplace with Razorpay payments, document workflows, BRSR assurance pipeline, and 160+ methodology pages. About a dozen user-facing data-entry surfaces and one multi-step engagement wizard — the real complexity sits in the assurance + content layer, not the form count.
Aggregate: roughly ~107,000 lines of source code across three live SaaS, shipped solo, with Claude Code carrying the heavy majority of the work. That’s the dataset behind every recommendation below.
So when I say “Claude Code is the most reliable single tool” I mean it carried 70%+ of the actual code that ended up in production across three SaaS.
I built Prism, an AI gateway. Prism doesn’t compete with any of the tools below — it sits between your app and the AI providers. But if I link to my own AI cost calculator or LLM infrastructure posts, that’s why.
The tools, ranked by my 2026 daily-driver order
1. Claude Code — best for complex, multi-file, long-context work
Use when: you need the model to reason across a whole codebase, refactor across files, design a feature that touches multiple modules, or do anything that would require keeping ~50,000+ tokens of context in its head.
What it does well: the long-context reasoning is genuinely a different category from any IDE-integrated tool. When I was building Prism’s semantic cache layer (BGE embeddings + Upstash Vector + Redis fallback), I gave Claude Code the full schema of all three storage layers, the request/response types, and the existing exact-match cache code, and it produced a working semantic layer with appropriate types and error handling in one shot. That’s roughly 1,200 lines across 6 files. Cursor would have needed me to point at each file individually.
The CLI workflow matters more than people give it credit for. Being able to run it in a terminal beside VSCode, hand it a feature spec, and let it work — without it living inside my editor — keeps my editor experience clean and my model interaction deliberate. It’s a different mental model from “AI as autocomplete.”
What it does poorly: raw typing speed. There is no IDE-grade tab completion. If you’re banging out a form or a CRUD route, this is overkill and slower than just typing.
Cost reality: two pricing paths.
- Anthropic API pay-per-token — variable. For comparable solo-founder usage you’d be looking at $80–$250+/month depending on intensity. Prompt caching trims ~40% off the bill if you’re using it.
- Claude Max subscription — a flat monthly plan that includes Claude Code with very generous usage limits. $100/month for Max (5×) and $200/month for Max (20×).
I’m currently on the $200/month Max plan. I started on the $100 plan and upgraded when my Citare velocity work (the 76k-LOC-in-12-days sprint above) made me hit the ceiling repeatedly. For my workload, $200 flat is materially better than the API metering anxiety — I stop thinking about cost per query and just use the tool, which itself ships more code per day.
If you’re building seriously, my recommendation order is: $100 Max → upgrade to $200 Max when you hit limits → only fall back to API pay-go if you outgrow even $200. The mental savings of a flat fee are bigger than the dollar savings of pay-go for most solo founders.
The verdict: if you only buy one tool in 2026, this is it for serious solo founders building real backends. Read the full Claude Code review → (coming soon)
2. Antigravity — the cautionary tale
This is the section I came to write this article for.
The story. Antigravity was, for several months, the fastest AI coding experience I’d ever used. It was built on a VSCode foundation, so the baseline editor behavior was exactly what I was already comfortable with. On top of that, it shipped with native Gemini integration, which was at least 2× faster than Claude for routine tasks — simple file edits, boilerplate, form scaffolding, anything where you don’t need deep reasoning but want the model to just do the thing.
For about a month, my workflow was: Claude Code for the architecture work, Antigravity-with-Gemini for the speed work. The combination was excellent. I built large parts of BatchWise’s form ecosystem this way — the boring high-volume work that Claude Code would have been overpriced and overslow for.
What changed. Roughly two weeks ago (mid-May 2026), the Antigravity team shipped a major redesign that materially restructured the UX. I’m sure there’s a coherent vision behind it, but in practice the new product is different enough from the old one that re-learning the new flow would cost me more time than the speed gain was worth.
So I dropped it. Mid-project. That’s a strong signal — when a tool is genuinely good, you don’t drop it after a redesign; you absorb the friction. The fact that I dropped Antigravity tells me the value-to-friction ratio crossed a line for me.
What it still does well for someone starting fresh: the Gemini-native speed advantage is real. If you’re greenfield-building today and don’t have muscle memory in the pre-redesign UX, Antigravity is still worth a serious look — especially for high-volume routine work.
What it does poorly: the recent redesign created exactly the wrong kind of churn — disruptive to existing users with no obvious benefit they could feel quickly.
The verdict: if you’re new to it, try it. If you’re already mid-flow on a project, don’t migrate — the cost of context-shifting is high right now. Worth re-evaluating in 3 months once the redesign stabilizes. Read the full Antigravity review (including what I’d want before re-adopting) → (coming soon)
3. Cursor — best everyday IDE, even if it’s not my pick
Use when: you want the AI to disappear into the editing experience. Forms, components, small refactors, bug fixes, learning a new library, debugging. Especially good for visual coders who think in tab-completions.
What it does well: tab completion is best-in-class. The chat sidebar is genuinely useful for “ask about this file” — fast, low-friction. Composer mode handles small multi-file changes well. The .cursorrules file is the underrated power feature — you keep one per repo with the project’s conventions, and it materially improves output quality.
Honest disclosure: I tried Cursor and didn’t stick with it. My workflow leans heavier on architecture decisions than on tab-completion-flow, and the VSCode-plus-Claude-Code split mapped better to how I think. That’s a me thing, not a Cursor problem. Most solo founders I know who do more UI-heavy work love Cursor and would not switch.
What it does poorly: as soon as the task gets large enough that the model needs to actually plan, Cursor’s reasoning starts to fall behind Claude Code. Composer mode is fine for small changes but stumbles on the 800+ line, 6-file changes that Claude Code handles in one shot.
Cost reality (May 2026): Cursor restructured pricing in 2025. Current plans:
| Plan | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Hobby | Free | Limited completions, no credit card required |
| Pro | $20/mo ($16/mo annual) | $20 of model credits per month — not unlimited |
| Pro+ | $60/mo | 3× the Pro credit pool |
| Ultra | $200/mo | Heaviest individual plan |
| Business | $40/seat/mo | Team admin + shared rules |
The Pro plan being credit-pool based (since June 2025) is the part most reviews skip. Frontier-model usage burns through the $20 of credits faster than you’d expect — many heavy users end up on Pro+ at $60/mo, which puts it in the same ballpark as Claude Code’s API usage.
The verdict: the easiest first AI coding tool to buy. The fact that I don’t use it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t — if you’re more tab-completion-driven than I am, this is probably your tool. Read the full Cursor review → (coming soon)
4. Windsurf — Cursor’s most credible competitor
Use when: you want Cursor’s everyday IDE experience but the Cursor team’s specific opinions (or pricing trajectory) don’t fit you.
What it does well: the IDE experience is genuinely close to Cursor. Cascade mode (their composer equivalent) is competitive. For Python-heavy or notebook-adjacent work, several people I know prefer it. Pricing is similar to Cursor’s, though it hasn’t restructured into credit pools as aggressively.
What it does poorly: for what I do, it doesn’t have a clear advantage over Cursor. The .cursorrules ecosystem is more mature on Cursor’s side. Momentum is heavier on Cursor’s side.
Verdict: a strong number two in the IDE category. If you don’t like Cursor for whatever reason, this is the next call. Read the full Windsurf review → (coming soon)
5. GitHub Copilot — fine if you’re locked in, behind otherwise
Use when: your company mandates it, or you live deep in JetBrains/Visual Studio where Cursor doesn’t reach.
What it does well: integration depth in non-VSCode editors is genuinely good — JetBrains, Visual Studio, Xcode. The enterprise compliance story is real (which is why every Fortune 500 has it). Tab completion is competent.
What it does poorly: in head-to-head daily use as a solo founder, it’s been outclassed in raw quality by Cursor and outclassed in agentic capability by Claude Code and (pre-redesign) Antigravity. The model defaults are weaker than what competitors expose.
Verdict: I don’t pay for it personally. Read the full Copilot review → (coming soon)
Quick comparison table
| Tool | Best for | Weakness | Monthly cost (solo) | My rank |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Claude Code | Complex multi-file work, backend logic, long context | No IDE-grade typing UX | $100/$200 Max (flat) or API pay-go | 1 |
| Antigravity (pre-redesign) | Speed for routine work via native Gemini | Mid-2026 redesign disrupted existing users | Free preview | 2 (paused) |
| Cursor | Daily IDE, fast edits, tab completion | Stumbles on large multi-file tasks; credit-pool surprises | $20–60+ | 3 |
| Windsurf | Cursor alternative, similar IDE experience | No decisive edge over Cursor | $15–20 | 4 |
| GitHub Copilot | JetBrains / Visual Studio integration | Behind on quality and agentic capability | $10–19 | 5 |
Picking your stack — three honest recommendations
If you’re a solo founder building serious products in 2026: Claude Code + your editor of choice. Start on the $100/month Anthropic Max plan, upgrade to $200/month Max when you hit the ceiling (I did — it’s worth it). If you’re a tab-completion person, the editor is Cursor. If you’re more architecture-driven, plain VSCode works (it’s my setup). The point is Claude Code is the engine; the editor is the steering wheel — pick whichever steering wheel you like best.
If you’re a non-technical founder learning to ship: start with Cursor alone. The IDE experience is the part that teaches you the loop of read-code → understand → edit → run. Adding Claude Code before you’ve internalized that loop just hides what’s happening. Once you’re comfortable, add Claude Code for the harder backend stuff.
If you’re greenfield-building today: consider Antigravity for the routine-work speed advantage. If you have no muscle memory in the old UX to disrupt, the Gemini-native speed is still a genuine differentiator. Pair with Claude Code for the deep work. Re-evaluate the Antigravity decision in 3 months once the redesign stabilizes.
Not sure which stack fits you? I’m building a 6-question picker that recommends one based on your situation.
Pricing reality — what you’ll actually spend in 2026
Most “free trial” pricing makes these look cheap. Reality at solo-founder usage:
- Claude Code via Anthropic Max: $100/month (5×) or $200/month (20×). Flat fee. No usage anxiety. This is what I pay.
- Claude Code via API pay-go: $80–250+/month for equivalent usage. Use Anthropic’s prompt caching — 35–45% cost reductions are real.
- Cursor Pro: $20/month, but treat it as $20 of credits and expect heavy users to move to Pro+ at $60/month.
- Cursor + Claude Code Max stack: $120–220/month total.
- VSCode + Claude Code Max stack (my setup): $100–200/month total. Cheaper than Cursor-inclusive setups since VSCode itself is free.
For context: I pay $200/month flat for Claude Code Max (20×), upgraded from the $100 plan after Citare’s 12-day build hit the ceiling repeatedly. I consider this the cheapest engineer I will ever hire — ~107,000 lines of production code across three SaaS, mostly through one CLI tool.
If your AI bill is creeping up, my AI API cost calculator models savings from caching, routing, and model selection.
What changed in 2026 that matters
Four updates from the last 6 months that should shift how you think about these tools:
- Claude 4.6 + 1M-token context made Claude Code’s long-context advantage much sharper. The use case for “give the model your whole codebase” is real now, not theoretical.
- Antigravity’s May 2026 redesign — see the cautionary tale above. The category’s most exciting product became its most disrupted.
- Anthropic’s prompt caching (now stable) makes Claude Code 30–45% cheaper at heavy use. If you’re not on it, you’re overpaying.
- Cursor’s credit-pool restructuring (June 2025) means the $20 Pro plan is no longer truly unlimited. Plan accordingly.
What I’d actually buy today (May 2026)
If I were starting from scratch tomorrow, I’d subscribe to:
- Anthropic Max ($100/month, 5×) — Claude Code’s flat-fee plan. Day one. Upgrade to $200 (20×) when you start hitting limits regularly.
- VSCode — free, day one. Add Cursor instead if you prefer tab-completion-driven flow.
- Antigravity preview — only if you’re greenfield and not migrating in.
That’s the 2026 stack. Total $100–200/month at realistic solo-founder volumes, flat fee, no surprises.
Where to go next
- Cursor vs Claude Code: which to buy first (coming soon) — if you can only pick one.
- How I built Prism (AI gateway) using Claude Code (coming soon) — case study showing the actual prompts and decisions.
- Anthropic prompt caching: real numbers from production (coming soon) — the 40% cost cut explained.
- Which AI coding tool fits you? (6-question quiz) (coming soon) — personalized recommendation.
Last updated 2026-05-21. I refresh this post quarterly as the landscape moves — if you spot something stale, poke me on Twitter/X.