Empirical
Summary
Every AI coding session starts cold — the assistant doesn't know your codebase, your conventions, or the decision you spent three hours on yesterday, so you re-explain it again.
Empirical addresses this by sitting between your AI tools and your projects as a persistent memory layer, capturing context once and making it available across sessions and tools without requiring workflow changes. The vendor describes it as memory infrastructure: you query it, it returns relevant project knowledge, and token counts drop because you stop restating what the system should already know. Teams working on shared codebases can pool context through workspaces rather than each developer rebuilding it independently. The ceiling appears when you need the memory layer to reason, prioritize, or act — Empirical retrieves, it does not plan, so any orchestration logic lives elsewhere. The scraped page is sparse on specifics around retrieval architecture and what breaks at scale, which leaves production edge cases underdocumented.
Bottom line: A clear fit for individual developers or small teams burning tokens on repeated context-setting in daily coding assistant sessions — but teams needing the memory layer to trigger actions or handle complex retrieval logic across large, heterogeneous codebases will hit the boundaries of a passive retrieval tool and look elsewhere.
Pricing Plans
SubscriptionLast verified 1 week ago- Price
- $2.99/mo
- Free Tier
- 200 memories, memory graph + semantic search, MCP integrations, CLI access, data encrypted, community support
FREE
Forever free. No card. Real memory for your AI tools. The full Empirical layer to try on real work.
- 200 memories
- Memory graph + semantic search
- MCP integrations (Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf)
- CLI access
- Data encrypted
- Community support
PRO
For builders running AI tools daily. Persistent memory that keeps up with you.
- 2,000 memories
- 3 blueprint installs / month
- Everything in Free
- Personal Heartbeat + Daydream
- 1 shared workspace
- Email support
BUILDER
Min 3 seats. Billed monthly. For teams sharing context across projects, repos, and coding agents.
- 10,000 memories
- 10 blueprint installs / month
- Everything in Pro
- 3 shared workspaces
- Workspace Daydream
- Discord bot for team workspaces
- Help shape the Empirical roadmap
- Priority support
ENTERPRISE
For organizations that need higher limits and white-glove onboarding.
- 50,000 memories
- 30 blueprint installs / month
- Everything in Builder
- 20 workspaces
- Custom memory limits
- HIPAA compliance mode available
- Dedicated support
View full pricing on empirical.gauzza.com →
Pricing may have changed since last verified. Check the official site for current plans.
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Pros
Sign in to edit- Persistent cross-session memory so developers stop re-explaining codebase conventions at the start of every AI session, which means tokens go toward actual work instead of orientation.
- Shared team workspaces so context captured by one developer is available to the next agent session any teammate opens, which means architectural decisions and conventions accumulate as a team asset rather than living only in individual chat histories.
- API access so teams can push and pull context programmatically, which means memory management can be wired into existing CI or tooling pipelines rather than handled manually through a UI.
- Freemium entry point with no credit card required, so individual developers can validate whether persistent memory actually reduces their token spend before committing budget.
Cons
Sign in to edit- Empirical is a retrieval layer, not a reasoning one — it surfaces stored context when queried but does not decide what is relevant, what is stale, or how to weight competing memories. Teams expecting the tool to handle those judgments find themselves building that logic on top, which reintroduces the complexity they were trying to avoid.
- The public page is thin on retrieval architecture specifics: chunking strategy, context window handling, and behavior when stored memory grows large are not documented in the scraped content. Teams running large or fast-moving codebases cannot assess retrieval reliability without direct testing, and discovering failure modes in production is the exact scenario this category of tooling is supposed to prevent.
- No self-hosted option is available, which means all project context travels through Empirical's infrastructure. Teams operating under strict data residency requirements or working on sensitive codebases will rule this out without a private deployment path and move to a self-hostable memory solution instead.
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About
- Platforms
- Web, CLI, MCP integrations
- API Available
- Yes
- Self-Hosted
- No
- Last Updated
- 2026-06-30T09:03:39.842Z
Best For
Who it's for
- Individual developers using AI coding assistants daily
- Users seeking token cost savings without changing workflows
What it does well
- Reducing token consumption in coding agent sessions
- Maintaining persistent context across multiple AI tools
- Sharing project memories within teams via workspaces
Integrations
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Empirical free?
- Empirical has a permanent free tier alongside paid upgrades (paid plans from $2.99/mo). You can keep using a baseline version indefinitely without paying.
- Is Empirical open source?
- No — Empirical is a closed-source tool. Source code is not publicly available.
- Does Empirical have an API?
- Yes. Empirical exposes a developer API. See the official documentation at https://empirical.gauzza.com for details.
- What platforms does Empirical support?
- Empirical is available on: Web, CLI, MCP integrations.
Hours Saved & ROI Stories Community
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Curated lists that include this category
Repeated context injection is one of the quieter budget leaks in AI-assisted development: every new session, every new tool, you paste the same architecture notes, the same naming conventions, the same ‘we decided against X because Y.’ Empirical is a memory infrastructure layer built to absorb that cost. The vendor describes it as sitting persistently behind your AI coding tools, storing project context and surfacing it on demand so sessions open with knowledge already in place rather than requiring manual re-seeding.
The differentiating mechanism is the workspace model — context is not siloed per user or per session but shared across a team working on the same codebase. One developer’s captured decision propagates to the next agent session another team member opens, which means institutional knowledge about the project accumulates rather than evaporating at session end. An API is available, giving teams the option to push or pull context programmatically rather than relying entirely on the tool’s native integrations.
Empirical fits cleanest in the part of your stack that is repetitive and passive: the daily coding assistant grind where re-explaining context is the overhead, not the work. It fits poorly when you need the memory layer to do something — classify what to retain, route retrieved context to different agents, or decide what is stale. Those decisions stay with you or with whatever orchestration system you already run. The page offers limited technical detail on retrieval architecture, chunking strategy, or what happens to context at codebase scale, so teams with large or complex repositories should validate retrieval quality directly before committing.
