I keep a spreadsheet of every AI subscription I've paid for. Looking at it now, the "cancelled" column is longer than the "active" one, and that's the most useful thing I can tell you about AI tools in 2026: the hard part isn't finding good tools, it's resisting the urge to pay for all of them.
So instead of dumping a list of fifty names on you, I'm going to organize this the way I actually think about it, by the job you're hiring the tool to do. Pick the categories you care about and ignore the rest.
How to choose an AI tool (the only framework you need)
Before any list, here's the filter I run everything through:
- What specific job am I hiring it for? "AI for marketing" is too vague. "Write first-draft email subject lines" is a job. 2. Does it beat what I already have? Most new tools are slightly different versions of something you're already paying for. 3. Will I use it weekly? If not, don't subscribe. Use the free tier or skip it.
That's it. If a tool can't clearly answer those three, it goes in the cancelled column.
Best all-purpose AI assistants
These are the do-everything chatbots, and honestly, for most people one of these plus nothing else covers 80% of needs.
- ChatGPT (OpenAI) – the broadest all-rounder, with image generation, voice, and agents built in. The safest single pick. - Claude (Anthropic) – my choice for writing and coding; more natural long-form output. - Gemini (Google) – unbeatable if you live in Gmail, Docs, and Drive.
All three have genuinely usable free tiers and paid plans around $20/month. Most people overpay by subscribing to more than one before they've maxed out the free versions.
Best AI tools for writing
- Claude for long-form drafting that needs the least editing. - ChatGPT for versatile, fast everyday writing. - Grammarly for catching errors and tone issues; I keep it running in the background everywhere.
I draft in Claude, polish tone in Grammarly, and that combination has replaced about three tools I used to pay for.
Best AI tools for coding
The coding space exploded, and it's where AI delivers some of its clearest value.
- Cursor – an AI-first editor for serious, multi-file projects. - Claude Code – excellent terminal-based building and refactoring. - GitHub Copilot – the practical pick if you already live in VS Code and GitHub.
If you're a developer, try Cursor and Copilot on your real codebase for a week each; the right one is the one that fits your existing habits.
Best AI tools for images
- Midjourney – still the leader for artistic quality and style. - Adobe Firefly – the commercial-safe choice, trained on licensed content, with clear IP terms and Photoshop integration. - Canva Magic Studio – the easiest for non-designers making social and marketing graphics.
For client work where licensing matters, I lean on Firefly. For pure visual ideation, Midjourney.
Best AI tools for video
- Runway – strong, controllable AI video with a real editing toolkit. - Google Veo – impressive text-to-video quality. - Synthesia – the go-to for business videos and avatar presenters from a script.
AI video improves monthly but hasn't replaced real production yet. It's brilliant for concepts, drafts, and explainer content; less so for polished final cuts.
Best AI tools for research
- Perplexity – built around cited, structured answers, which saves real verification time. - NotebookLM – answers questions using your own uploaded documents, which is its killer feature. - The deep-research modes inside ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini for longer reports.
When I need to trust the answer, I want sources, and Perplexity's citations are why it stays in my stack.
Best AI tools for productivity and audio
- NotebookLM again, for turning your notes and files into something you can interrogate. - ElevenLabs for realistic text-to-speech and voice work. - Your existing suite's built-in AI (Microsoft 365 Copilot, Google's Gemini in Workspace) often beats adding a separate tool.
Quick comparison
| Job | Top pick | Also great | Rough price | |-----|----------|------------|-------------| | All-purpose | ChatGPT | Claude, Gemini | Free / ~$20 mo | | Writing | Claude | ChatGPT, Grammarly | Free / ~$20 mo | | Coding | Cursor | Claude Code, Copilot | ~$10–20 mo | | Images | Midjourney | Firefly, Canva | ~$10+ mo | | Video | Runway | Veo, Synthesia | Varies | | Research | Perplexity | NotebookLM | Free / ~$20 mo |
Prices and model versions change constantly; check current plans before subscribing.
Common mistakes people make
- Subscribing before exhausting the free tier. Most free tiers are good enough to decide. - Collecting tools instead of using them. A drawer full of subscriptions you don't open is just a recurring charge. - Picking by hype, not by job. The viral tool of the month is rarely the one that survives in your workflow. - Forgetting licensing. For commercial images, "looks great" isn't enough; you need clear usage rights (this is where Firefly earns its keep). - Never cancelling. Audit your subscriptions quarterly. I find at least one I forgot about every time.
Expert tips
- Start with one all-purpose assistant and only add specialized tools when you hit a real wall. - Match the tool to the job, not the brand. Route writing to one, research to another. - Re-evaluate every quarter. The landscape shifts fast; today's best can slip in months. - Use free tiers as your testing ground before committing money. - Verify anything important. Every tool here is confident and occasionally wrong.
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