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FAQs
Head over to https://customers.gitlab.com, choose the plan that is right for you.
Yes. You have a few options. You can add users to your subscription any time during the subscription period. You can log in to your account via the GitLab Customers Portal and add more seats or contact sales for a quote. In either case, the cost will be prorated from the date of quote/purchase through the end of the subscription period. You may also pay for the additional licenses per our true-up model.
If you have quarterly subscription reconciliation enabled (default option for new and renewing subscriptions after Aug 1, 2021), users added during a quarter will only be charged for the remaining quarters of their subscription term as opposed to the full annual subscription fee(s) with annual true-ups. For example, if you add 50 users to your subscription during the third quarter of your subscription term, the 50 users will only be charged for the fourth quarter of your subscription term as opposed to all four quarters as per annual true-ups.
If you do not have quarterly subscription reconciliation enabled, add-on users will be charged annual true-ups for the full term during which they were added. For example, if you have 100 active users today, you should purchase a 100 user subscription. Suppose that when you renew next year you have 300 active users (200 extra users). When you renew you pay for a 300 user subscription and you also pay the full annual fee for the 200 users that you added during the year.
You will receive a new license that you will need to upload to your GitLab instance. This can be done by following these instructions.
The license key is a static file which, upon uploading, allows GitLab Enterprise Edition to run. During license upload we check that the active users on your GitLab Enterprise Edition instance doesn't exceed the new number of users. During the licensed period you may add as many users as you want. The license key will expire after one year for GitLab subscribers.
You can find an up to date list on the features page.
Yes. You can import your projects from most of the existing providers, including GitHub and Bitbucket. See our documentation for all your import options.
Yes! We provide free Ultimate licenses, along with 50K compute minutes/month, to qualifying open source projects, educational institutions, and startups. Find out more by visiting our GitLab for Open Source, GitLab for Education, and GitLab for Startups program pages.
On this page we represent our capabilities and those are meant to be filters on our buyer-based open core pricing model. You can learn more about how we make tiering decisions on our pricing handbook page.
Some features are unique to self-managed and do not apply to SaaS. You can find an up to date list on the features page.
Projects on GitLab.com have a 10 GiB storage limit on their Git repository and LFS storage.
If you reach your limits, you can manage your compute usage, purchase additional compute minutes, or upgrade your account to Premium or Ultimate. Your own runners can still be used even if you reach your limits.
No. We will only restrict your minutes for our shared runners (SaaS only). If you have a specific runner setup for your projects, there is no limit to your build time on GitLab SaaS.
There has been a massive uptick in abuse of free compute minutes available on GitLab.com to mine cryptocurrencies - which creates intermittent performance issues for GitLab.com users. To discourage such abuse, credit/debit card details are required if you choose to use GitLab.com shared runners. Credit/debit card details are not required if you bring your own runner or disable shared runners. When you provide the card, it will be verified with a one-dollar authorization transaction. No charge will be made and no money will transfer. Learn more here
Yes. Public projects created after 2021-07-17 will have an allocation of compute minutes as follows: Free tier - 50,000 minutes, Premium tier - 1,250,000 minutes, Ultimate tier - 6,250,000.
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