Self-host
Free
AGPL-3.0
- Full Homaic stack on your infrastructure
- Bring your own Anthropic API key for Mode A
- Bring your own MCP client for Mode B
- Full export, full schema, full sources
- Managed hosting and updates
Pricing
Three ways to run Homaic. AGPL self-host for free; Homaic-hosted free during beta; Homaic Pro for the long-running subscription. Pricing for the Pro tier ratifies before launch.
Free
AGPL-3.0
Free during beta
beta access
Pricing TBD
subscription
Questions
Homaic-hosted is free during the beta. There’s no separate trial period and no credit card required. Subscription pricing for the Pro tier ratifies before launch; existing beta users will see pricing detail in their account before any charge.
Your manifest exports in three canonical formats: PostgreSQL dump, JSON, and CSV. Export is one click and includes everything — assets, service events, briefs, contractor records, decisions.
The full Homaic stack is AGPL-licensed: clone the repository, run your export against your own infrastructure, never depend on Homaic-the-company existing. Built to outlive any vendor, including Homaic.
Yes. The full stack is AGPL-3.0; the canonical schema is published row-by-row. Bring your own Supabase and your own Anthropic API key for Mode A extractions.
The trade is operational: you run the database, the upgrades, and the backups. The self-host guide covers the requirements.
No. Homaic is paid by homeowners to be on their side. There is no contractor-marketplace rake, no advertising surface, no cross-user aggregation without explicit opt-in — and any aggregation is gated by k-anonymity (k ≥ 10) per the foundation standards.
Privacy is structural, not promised: encrypted at rest, row-level security, deletion actually deletes.
Mode A AI extractions cost real money on the back end (vision-model inference per photo). Until the beta cohort produces enough usage signal to set a sustainable subscription, the Pro tier price stays uncalled. The number ratifies before launch.
Saying “coming soon” with a fake number would be a dark pattern. We’d rather tell you we don’t know yet.