Thinking of switching to a yearly Pika AI plan to save money? This guide breaks down annual pricing, total yearly cost, included credits, and who each tier is best for so you can upgrade with confidence and avoid overpaying.
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If you’re searching “Pika AI yearly price”, you’re probably deciding between two things:
Paying month-to-month, or
Choosing annual billing to save money (and lock in predictable access for a full year).
This guide explains Pika’s annual pricing, what you get in each tier, how many credits you receive over a year, and how to estimate the real yearly cost based on your workflow (short-form posting, cinematic clips, ads, anime/VFX, or client work).
Prices and plan details can change. Always confirm the latest numbers on Pika’s official pricing page before buying.
What “Pika AI yearly price” means
Pika annual billing discount: how it works
Official plan tiers and annual cost (web pricing)
Yearly credits: what you actually get over 12 months
Credit costs per video: how your yearly value is really determined
“Cost per credit” and “cost per video” examples
Which annual plan is best for you (creator types)
Annual vs monthly: when yearly is worth it
Buying on iOS vs web: why prices may differ
How to avoid wasting yearly credits: a credit-saving workflow
Upgrading, switching, and VAT considerations
FAQs
Final recommendations
“Yearly price” can mean either:
Annual billing total (you pay one lump sum for a year), or
the effective monthly price when billed yearly (e.g., “$8/month billed yearly”), which is how many SaaS pricing pages present annual plans.
Pika’s official pricing page explicitly shows a toggle for “Yearly -20% off” and “Monthly,” and the plan cards display “/ month billed yearly” pricing when the yearly option is selected.
So when you see something like $8/month billed yearly, the real yearly cost is typically:
$8 × 12 = $96 per year
On Pika’s official pricing page, the top of the pricing table includes the wording:
“Yearly -20% off”
That’s important for two reasons:
Annual billing is designed to be cheaper than paying monthly (in most cases).
The “yearly price” is the best choice if you’ll be using Pika consistently because you’re basically pre-paying for steady monthly credits all year.
Pika lists four plans on the official pricing page:
Basic (Free)
Standard
Pro
Fancy
When the yearly option is shown, the plan pricing appears as:
Standard: $8 / month billed yearly
Pro: $28 / month billed yearly
Fancy: $76 / month billed yearly
Here’s what those rates mean in annual spend (simple multiplication):
Standard yearly total: $8 × 12 = $96/year
Pro yearly total: $28 × 12 = $336/year
Fancy yearly total: $76 × 12 = $912/year
Pika also notes: “VAT rate may be charged, depending on your country of residence.”
So your final checkout may be higher depending on tax rules.
Your yearly value depends on credits (Pika’s usage currency). On the official pricing page, the monthly credit allocations are:
Basic (Free): 80 monthly video credits
Standard: 700 monthly video credits
Pro: 2300 monthly video credits
Fancy: 6000 monthly video credits
Assuming the credits are monthly allocations (most subscription plans work that way):
Basic: 80 × 12 = 960 credits/year
Standard: 700 × 12 = 8,400 credits/year
Pro: 2300 × 12 = 27,600 credits/year
Fancy: 6000 × 12 = 72,000 credits/year
That credit total is what you’re really buying when you choose annual billing.
Pika includes a “Cost per video” list on each plan card (and also provides detailed credit tables further down).
Examples shown on the official pricing page include:
10 credits (Turbo model using Pikascenes, Pikadditions, or Pikaswaps)
60 credits (Turbo model using Pikatwists)
20 credits (Pro model using Pikadditions or Pikaswaps)
30 credits (Pro model using Selfie With Your Younger Self” template)
80 credits (Pro model using Pikatwists)
And in the detailed tables, Pika shows credit costs for modes like:
Text-to-Video & Image-to-Video (Model 2.5) with different costs by resolution and duration
Pikaframes with longer durations costing more credits
Pikaformance at 3 credits/second (up to different audio durations)
The yearly price isn’t about “unlimited video.” It’s about how far your yearly credit pool goes depending on:
Which tools you use,
How long your clips are,
What resolution you generate,
How many iterations you need to get a “keeper.”
Let’s translate annual pricing into simple planning numbers.
Using the web yearly effective monthly rates:
Standard: $8/month for 700 credits → $8 ÷ 700 ≈ $0.0114 per credit
Pro: $28/month for 2300 credits → $28 ÷ 2300 ≈ $0.0122 per credit
Fancy: $76/month for 6000 credits → $76 ÷ 6000 ≈ $0.0127 per credit
This shows a useful truth: the tiers are often priced so cost per credit is in the same neighborhood, and you’re mostly paying for:
More volume (bigger credit pool),
Faster generation speed,
And higher-resolution access across the stack.
Using Pika’s listed cost-per-video examples:
(Example: Turbo model using Pikascenes/Pikadditions/Pikaswaps)
Standard yearly (8,400 credits): ~840 videos/year
Pro yearly (27,600 credits): ~2,760 videos/year
Fancy yearly (72,000 credits): ~7,200 videos/year
That’s the optimistic case.
Pika shows 60 credits (Turbo) and 80 credits (Pro) for Pikatwists examples.
Standard yearly (8,400 credits):
at 60 credits each → ~140 videos/year
at 80 credits each → ~105 videos/year
Pro yearly (27,600 credits):
at 80 credits each → ~345 videos/year
Fancy yearly (72,000 credits):
at 80 credits each → ~900 videos/year
Most creators don’t generate once. They iterate. If you do 6-15 generations to get one final clip, your effective cost per final video is much higher.
That’s why higher tiers can “pay for themselves” if speed and iteration are part of your workflow.
Use this section like a decision tree.
Pika’s Basic plan includes 80 monthly credits and access to Pika 2.5 (480p only) along with key tools, and it lists watermark free downloads and commercial use on the pricing page.
Choose Basic if:
You’re experimenting,
You only need occasional clips,
You’re building prompt skills before paying.
Standard includes:
700 monthly video credits
Pika 2.5 all resolutions
“Fast generations”
Watermark-free downloads + commercial use
Choose Standard yearly if:
You post weekly (Shorts/Reels),
You want higher res exports,
You don’t do massive iteration daily.
Pro includes:
2300 monthly credits
“Faster generations”
The same major tool access (Pika 2.5 all resolutions, Pikaframes, etc.)
Choose Pro yearly if:
You post 3–7 times per week,
You do lots of re-rolls,
You do ads, client work, or need reliable speed.
Fancy includes:
6000 monthly credits
“Fastest generations”
Choose Fancy yearly if:
you produce at scale,
you run many variations,
you have multiple brand pages or an agency workflow.
Annual billing is usually best when at least one of these is true:
You post consistently (weekly or more)
You know Pika is part of your core workflow
You want the lowest effective monthly cost (Pika advertises yearly as -20% off)
Monthly billing is usually better when:
you’re not sure you’ll use it next month,
you’re testing Pika against competitors,
you only need it for a short project.
Rule of thumb:
If you plan to use Pika for 3+ months in a row, yearly is often the better financial move but only if you’re sure you’ll keep using it.
Here’s something many people don’t expect:
Web pricing (pika.art/pricing) shows “$8/$28/$76 per month billed yearly” for Standard/Pro/Fancy (when yearly is selected).
But Apple's App Store listing for Pika’s iOS app shows in-app purchase options that can include different bundles (weekly/monthly/yearly) and different totals e.g., it lists Standard Yearly $96.00, Pro Yearly $199.00, plus monthly/weekly options.
App stores sometimes have region-based pricing rules.
In-app purchases can differ from web checkout.
Apple takes a commission, which can affect pricing and packaging.
Practical advice:
If you’re price-sensitive, compare:
Pika web checkout, and
iOS in-app subscription options
before you commit.
Annual plans feel “expensive” when you burn credits on low-quality outputs. These habits usually deliver the biggest ROI:
Write prompts with:
Subject + action,
Scene + lighting,
Camera movement,
Style keywords (cinematic, anime, etc.),
Quality constraints (clean, detailed, stable).
Don’t generate 4 variations immediately.
Test 1 → refine → then scale.
If the motion is wrong, adjust only camera/motion keywords.
If the style is wrong, adjust only style keywords.
Build a mini-library:
Travel cinematic template
Product ad template
Meme/quick effect template
If Pikatwists or longer Pikaframes runs cost more credits, don’t start there. Validate the concept cheaply first using lower-cost modes.
Pika’s pricing page states you can: “Upgrade, switch and cancel plan any time.”
It also notes VAT may apply depending on your country.
What to do before paying yearly:
Check your country’s tax/VAT at checkout,
Confirm your billing renewal settings,
Confirm your plan includes the features you need (resolution, speed, Pikaframes, etc.).
Pika advertises annual billing as “Yearly -20% off.”
Based on the web pricing shown for annual billing:
Standard: $96/year
Pro: $336/year
Fancy: $912/year
(plus any VAT depending on your country)
Standard: 8,400 credits/year
Pro: 27,600 credits/year
Fancy: 72,000 credits/year
The iOS app lists its own in-app purchases (including yearly totals), which can differ from web billing.
If you want the simplest way to choose a yearly plan:
Basic (Free): learning + occasional clips
Standard yearly: consistent posting (weekly) + good value
Pro yearly: frequent posting + heavy iteration + best overall speed/value
Fancy yearly: high-volume creation, agencies, ad testing at scale