Updated
Updated · Tom's Guide · May 30
OpenClaw Test Saves $30 With ChatGPT Login but Hits Usage Limits in 1 Week
Updated
Updated · Tom's Guide · May 30

OpenClaw Test Saves $30 With ChatGPT Login but Hits Usage Limits in 1 Week

1 articles · Updated · Tom's Guide · May 30
  • $21.99 VPS hosting let the analyst run OpenClaw with a ChatGPT subscription, avoiding separate API spending and saving an estimated $30 during a week of moderate use.
  • OpenClaw proved more useful as an agent platform than as a chatbot, building a news aggregator, managing persistent files and sending 8 a.m. Discord briefings through scheduled tasks.
  • Usage caps emerged quickly when the test moved to more complex workflows, limiting how long Plus subscribers can rely on subscription access alone for regular automation.
  • Setup still required extra OAuth steps through OpenAI's Codex route, and security concerns around OpenClaw's access to emails, files and systems pushed the test onto a separate server.
  • For users already paying for ChatGPT, the integration lowers the entry cost of trying AI agents, but heavier or multi-agent use may still require API billing or a Pro plan.
With its founder now at OpenAI, can the open-source OpenClaw platform mature into a secure, enterprise-ready solution for businesses?
Does linking AI agents to subscriptions truly save money, or does it merely mask the real, escalating costs of autonomous automation?
As AI agents proliferate, is a new API infrastructure layer the only way to prevent widespread system failures from rate limiting?