eve
Summary
Most agent infrastructure falls apart the moment a workflow pauses mid-execution — a model call times out, a human needs to sign off, or a sandboxed process hits a wall — and you're left stitching together state management hacks. Vercel's agentic infrastructure stack exists to close that gap.
The platform gives coding agents a native deployment surface — API, CLI, MCP, and agent-callable Skills — so agents ship and iterate on apps without a human relaying commands. Sandboxed VMs let agents run code they generated without that code touching your production environment. Durable Orchestration means a workflow that pauses for minutes or months resumes from the exact checkpoint, not from scratch. The constraint is architectural: there is no self-hosted path, so teams with strict data-residency requirements or air-gapped environments hit a wall before they write a single agent. At that point, the conversation moves to a competitor with an on-premises option.
Bottom line: Pick this when you're building agent-driven pipelines that need to scale from zero to millions of requests on managed infrastructure — but plan a different stack the moment your security policy requires code to never leave your own servers.
Pricing Plans
SubscriptionLast verified 1 week ago- Price
- $20/mo
- Free Tier
- Perfect starting place for web app or personal project with Hobby tier features
HOBBY
The perfect starting place for your web app or personal project
- Import your repo, deploy in seconds
- Automatic CI/CD
- Web Application Firewall
- Global, automated CDN
- Fluid compute
- DDoS Mitigation
- Traffic & performance insights
PRO
Everything you need to build and scale your app
- All Hobby features, plus:
- $20 of included usage credit
- Advanced spend management
- Team collaboration & free viewer seats
- Faster builds + no queues
- Cold start prevention
- Enterprise add-ons
ENTERPRISE
Critical security, performance, observability, platform SLAs, and support
- All Pro features, plus:
- Guest & Team access controls
- SCIM & Directory Sync
- Managed WAF Rulesets
- Multi-region compute & failover
- 99.99% SLA
- Advanced Support
View full pricing on vercel.com →
Pricing may have changed since last verified. Check the official site for current plans.
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Pros
Sign in to edit- Durable workflow orchestration that pauses and resumes from the exact checkpoint, so long-running agent tasks don't restart from zero after a timeout or an external dependency stalls.
- Sandboxed VMs for agent-generated code, which means agents can execute and test code they wrote without that code running in your production environment — a critical containment layer most teams otherwise build themselves.
- AI Gateway routes across hundreds of models, so swapping the underlying model or adding a fallback when one provider goes down is a configuration change, not a rewrite.
- Native agent interfaces — API, CLI, MCP, and Skills — so coding agents can deploy, investigate errors, and open PRs without a human relaying each command between the agent and the deployment surface.
- Delivery infrastructure cited at Zapier-scale (100 million monthly visits) and Notion-scale (millions of agent conversations daily), so teams avoid the spike-handling engineering that normally precedes a production launch.
Cons
Sign in to edit- No self-hosted option exists in the vendor documentation — teams with data-residency requirements, air-gapped networks, or on-premises security policies cannot run this stack inside their own perimeter, and the conversation moves to a competitor that offers on-premises deployment before the build begins.
- The platform is paid-only with no open-source core described on the product page, so teams that need to audit, fork, or extend the infrastructure layer at the source level have no path to do that — what the vendor ships is what you run.
- Agent autonomy is bounded by the Skills and MCP interfaces Vercel exposes — agents that need to call infrastructure primitives outside that surface (custom cloud resources, proprietary internal APIs, non-standard toolchains) require an integration layer that the team builds and maintains separately.
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About
- Platforms
- Web, Cloud
- API Available
- Yes
- Self-Hosted
- No
- Last Updated
- 2026-06-29T22:25:38.957Z
Best For
Who it's for
- Teams building agent-driven development pipelines
- Applications requiring long-running or resumable workflows
- Platforms serving high-traffic customer-facing agents
What it does well
- Deploying coding agents that ship and maintain applications
- Running autonomous agents in sandboxed environments
- Hosting scalable apps with durable orchestration and workflows
Integrations
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Is eve free?
- eve has a permanent free tier alongside paid upgrades (paid plans from $20/mo). You can keep using a baseline version indefinitely without paying.
- Is eve open source?
- Yes. eve is open source.
- Does eve have an API?
- Yes. eve exposes a developer API. See the official documentation at https://vercel.com for details.
- What platforms does eve support?
- eve is available on: Web, Cloud.
Hours Saved & ROI Stories Community
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Curated lists that include this category
Vercel’s agentic infrastructure platform is built around the premise that coding agents should be able to deploy, investigate, and fix applications in the same way a developer does — but autonomously. The core workflow chains together four layers: an AI Gateway that routes across hundreds of models, a Sandbox that runs agent-generated code in isolated VMs, a Workflows engine with durable orchestration, and a delivery layer that the vendor describes as scaling from zero to millions of requests instantly. Agents can open PRs, plan fixes, and push deployments without a human in the relay chain. Notion, Zapier, and Mintlify are cited on the product page as production customers at significant scale.
The differentiating feature is the Workflows engine’s pause-and-resume capability. The vendor describes workflows that can pause for minutes or months and then resume from the exact point they stopped — a meaningful architectural distinction from serverless functions that time out and lose state. This matters when an agent workflow is waiting on an external API, a review step, or a long-running computation: the job doesn’t fail, it waits.
The platform fits teams building customer-facing agents that need to handle traffic spikes without manual scaling, and development pipelines where agents autonomously investigate errors and ship fixes. It breaks, specifically, for teams that cannot send workloads to a managed cloud — there is no self-hosted option described in the vendor documentation. Organizations with data-residency mandates, government contracts, or internal policies requiring on-premises compute will exhaust the platform’s compliance surface and move to infrastructure they can run inside their own perimeter.
On the integration side, the vendor describes a plugin model (npx plugins add vercel/vercel-plugin), a Workflow SDK, a Flags SDK, a Chat SDK, and a Queues SDK, alongside framework support for Next.js, Nuxt, SvelteKit, and others. The MCP and Skills interfaces are positioned as the mechanism by which external agents call into Vercel’s deployment primitives — meaning an agent built on a third-party framework can invoke Vercel’s deployment layer as a tool call.
