CI/CD is an important aspect of software engineering that directly impacts engineering velocity, release confidence, and total cost of ownership. So, with the upcoming 2026 pricing changes to GitHub Actions, many teams are asking a fair question:
Are we paying the right price for the value we get, or are CI costs quietly creeping up without enough predictability?
This blog breaks down what is changing in GitHub Actions, how those changes affect different teams, and why many organizations are re-evaluating their platform choice and looking closely at GitLab for clearer pricing, stronger security, and a more consolidated DevSecOps experience.
What GitHub’s 2026 Pricing Changes Mean for Your Team
GitHub is introducing a more usage-aligned pricing model for Actions beginning in 2026. The headline updates sound positive, but the details matter.
Key changes to know
- New per-minute platform charge
A $0.002 per-minute Actions cloud platform charge applies to all workflows on GitHub-hosted and self-hosted runners. - Lower prices for GitHub-hosted runners
Runner rates drop by roughly 40 percent across sizes, with net reductions of up to 39 percent depending on machine type. The new platform charge is already baked into those reduced prices. - Self-hosted runners now metered
Historically, self-hosted runners avoided most Actions infrastructure costs. Starting March 1, 2026, they incur the new per-minute platform charge. - Public repos remain free
Actions usage on public repositories continues to be free, and GitHub Enterprise Server pricing is unchanged.
Who feels the impact?
Small teams and individuals
GitHub estimates that 96% of users will see no change. That’s a positive.
Mid-size and enterprise teams with heavy CI usage
Teams running frequent pipelines, long builds, or extensive self-hosted runner fleets may see new, less predictable costs even if headline rates drop.
Platform and DevOps leaders
Metered platform fees introduce another variable to forecast and explain, especially when usage spikes.
GitHub is also investing heavily in self-hosted runner improvements and observability, which is good news. The tradeoff is that CI is now explicitly priced as a platform service, not just compute.
GitHub Actions vs GitLab CI
For finance and engineering leaders, this difference is critical. GitHub’s model optimizes for flexibility, but that flexibility comes with variability. GitLab’s model emphasizes predictability and consolidation.
How Platform Choice Impacts Velocity, Transparency, and TCO
Engineering velocity
When CI costs are opaque or unpredictable, teams throttle pipelines, delay tests, or avoid parallelization. That slows feedback loops. Predictable CI encourages teams to automate aggressively and ship faster.
Transparency
Usage-based pricing requires strong governance and monitoring to avoid surprises. GitLab’s bundled approach makes it easier to understand what you are paying for and why.
Total cost of ownership
CI does not live in isolation. Security scanning, dependency management, compliance evidence, and deployment workflows all add tools and licenses. A fragmented toolchain increases operational overhead even if individual components look inexpensive.
Benefits of GitLab for Most Teams
GitLab takes a platform-first approach to DevSecOps. It offers predictable pricing with Free, Premium, and Ultimate tiers that have clear per-user costs. Users also have monthly GitLab Credits included for AI and advanced capabilities. Additionally, CI/CD is always included by default without separate platform fees
GitLab also has great security features such as SAST, DAST, dependency scanning, and container security built into the pipeline. Furthermore, GitLab is one toolchain with fewer handoffs. This means fewer third-party tools to manage, integrate, and audit. Source control, CI/CD, security, and deployment are all in a single platform. This leads to less context switching for developers and lower operational overhead for platform teams. For organizations under cost pressure, compliance scrutiny, or rapid scaling demands, this integrated model often results in a lower and more predictable total cost of ownership.
The Power of SPK and GitLab
GitHub Actions remains a powerful CI/CD solution, and for many teams, the 2026 changes will be neutral. However, if your organization relies heavily on CI, self-hosted runners, or complex pipelines, now is the right time to take a hard look at your spend and your operational model.
SPK and Associates helps engineering organizations assess CI/CD costs, model future usage, and evaluate whether migrating to GitLab can deliver better predictability, stronger security, and a more streamlined DevSecOps toolchain. If you are asking whether GitHub is costing more than it should, let’s answer that question with data and a clear path forward. Contact our experts to see if you can save on your CI software.








