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MeshPilot

FreemiumAgentic

Summary

Most developer AI tools treat your codebase as a one-shot prompt — every session starts cold, with no memory of what you built last week or why. MeshPilot is an agentic development environment built around the premise that the agent should already know your project before you type the first word.

MeshConsole gives you a workspace where terminals, files, browser previews, and a visual Kanban board are wired to live task state — the board reflects what the agent is actually doing, not what you last manually dragged. MeshMemory runs in the background, accumulating semantic context so the assistant builds a persistent model of your codebase over time. The open-source MeshUtility desktop widget layers voice dictation and AI prompt rewriting into any text field on your machine, independent of the main workspace. Remote task execution — running board tasks away from your local machine — is a paid-only feature, and the credit-based usage model means heavy swarm runs will exhaust a base allocation faster than casual use suggests.

Bottom line: Pick MeshPilot if you are a solo developer who wants an agent that remembers your project and a Kanban board that reflects reality; plan around the credit ceiling and the absence of self-hosting if your team runs sustained, high-volume agent workloads.

Pricing Plans

Subscription
Free Tier
MeshUtility is free and open source; paid plans include 7-day trial.

Plus

$20per month

For full mesh. 1,750 monthly credits. 7-day free trial.

  • Everything in Starter
  • Remote task execution
  • Higher rate limits
  • MeshMemory Cortex
  • Priority support
  • Early access to new features

View full pricing on meshpilot.in →

Pricing may have changed since last verified. Check the official site for current plans.

Community Performance Report Card

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Best For: Solo developers starting with agentic workflows, Teams needing persistent codebase memory, Users wanting local-first desktop tools with optional remote execution

Community Benchmarks Community

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  • Visual Kanban board wired to live agent task state, so you can see exactly what the autonomous CLI agent is executing without polling terminals or reading logs manually.
  • MeshMemory persists codebase context across sessions, which means the agent carries forward what it learned about your project rather than forcing you to re-explain the architecture every time you open a new session.
  • MeshUtility is open-source and works in any desktop text field on all three major operating systems, so you get voice dictation and AI prompt rewriting without locking that capability inside a paid workspace subscription.
  • Local-first data posture for the base memory tier, so sensitive codebase context does not leave your machine unless you opt into cloud features.
  • Persistent terminal sessions backed by a desktop runtime, which means a dropped connection or a browser refresh does not kill a running agent task mid-execution.
  • The credit model caps how much agent work you can run per month on a base allocation; sustained swarm runs — multiple agents executing in parallel across a large codebase — will exhaust credits before the billing period ends, and teams doing that volume will find themselves topping up frequently or hitting rate limits mid-task.
  • Remote task execution requires a paid subscription; teams that want to trigger board tasks from CI pipelines, mobile, or any machine other than the one running MeshConsole locally cannot do that on the free tier, which breaks the workflow for any team that treats the agent as a background service rather than a desktop tool.
  • No self-hosted deployment path exists — the vendor page describes local-first data handling but provides no binary, container image, or installer for running MeshConsole infrastructure on private servers. Teams with compliance requirements that prohibit SaaS environments for code execution will abandon MeshPilot at the architecture review stage, typically in favor of open-source alternatives that ship a Docker-based self-host option.

Community Reviews

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About

Platforms
Windows, macOS, Linux
API Available
No
Self-Hosted
No
Last Updated
2026-07-07T13:24:25.430Z

Best For

Who it's for

  • Solo developers starting with agentic workflows
  • Teams needing persistent codebase memory
  • Users wanting local-first desktop tools with optional remote execution

What it does well

  • Collaborating with autonomous CLI agents to write and manage code
  • Tracking projects via visual Kanban linked to live task state
  • Using voice dictation and prompt rewriting in any desktop text field

Discussion Community

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Community Notes & Tips Community

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is MeshPilot free?
MeshPilot has a permanent free tier alongside paid upgrades. You can keep using a baseline version indefinitely without paying.
Is MeshPilot open source?
No — MeshPilot is a closed-source tool. Source code is not publicly available.
What platforms does MeshPilot support?
MeshPilot is available on: Windows, macOS, Linux.

Hours Saved & ROI Stories Community

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MeshPilot

MeshPilot pairs autonomous CLI agents with a structured developer workspace. The agents write code, manage terminal sessions, and build projects while you track progress on a visual Kanban board that is wired directly to live task state — not a manual todo list bolted on the side. MeshConsole bundles terminals, a file manager, and a live browser preview into one environment, so the gap between ‘the agent ran something’ and ‘I can see what changed’ is as small as the tool can make it.

The differentiating bet MeshPilot makes is MeshMemory: a semantic memory layer that automatically saves context, notes, and task progress across sessions. The vendor describes this as giving the assistant a persistent, deep understanding of the codebase. The base tier stores memory locally; the AI-curated memory notes variant — which surfaces organized, queryable context rather than raw session logs — is a paid-only feature.

MeshUtility is the other distinct piece: a free, open-source desktop widget that adds push-to-talk voice dictation and global AI prompt rewriting to any text field on any application. It runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux and supports both local and cloud transcription. Because it is open-source and free-standing, it can be adopted without a MeshConsole subscription, which lowers the evaluation threshold for teams that want only the dictation layer.

The platform runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux with a local-first posture — the vendor states your work stays on your machine when you want it to. However, no downloadable binary or container is available for self-hosting the full MeshConsole environment; teams that need air-gapped or fully self-managed infrastructure will find the architecture does not support that requirement. Remote task execution, which lets you trigger board tasks from outside your local machine, is restricted to the paid tier.