The reason? Well, Microsoft believes the new polarizing announcement is made to align the market demands with offered services in the wake of the new AI-powered Bing, although a 1,000% increase still seems a little over too much. There are 10 available pricing plans. One is the free issue which includes Bing’s image, news, video, visual, web, and entity searches, as well as autosuggest and spell check, billed at 1,000 transactions free per month for all markets for only 3 tps (transactions per second). Others vary from $10 to $200 per 1,000 transactions and $25 per 25,000 transactions under faster tps rates. Read along to find out how expensive the Bing API cost for URLs.

How much does the Bing API cost for URLs?

You can see the full prices in this table. Each paid plan includes an optional Bing statistics add-in at $10 per 1,000 transactions, which was previously only costing $1. For those with large language models, Microsoft presents two tiers of pricing plans. For less than 1 million requests per day, the plan costs $28/1,000 transactions. For those with over 1 million, it starts from $200/1,000 transactions. How badly is Microsoft’s plan to increase Bing API’s cost for URLs affecting you? Let us know in the comments!

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