Free plan available

Fig AI

A sunset terminal autocomplete tool migrated to Amazon Q.

Visitfig.io
Intro

What is Fig AI?

Fig was an innovative developer tool designed to re-imagine the terminal interface as a next-generation command line. Operating as a seamless add-on to your existing setup, it integrated with popular shells, IDEs, and environments—making tasks like managing a mamba envs list, checking pm2 logs, or running a prisma migrate dev command much more intuitive. It brought modern IDE-style fig autocomplete and visual tools directly into the fig terminal, supporting everything from a simple netlify login or flutter run to complex infrastructure workflows like running a terragrunt command to show outputs or handling a terragrunt force-unlock. As a robust zsh-completions alternative, it helped developers quickly figure out how to delete worktree git setups or use a zoxide remove entry. However, Fig has been officially sunset, and its team has moved to Amazon to build Amazon Q for command line.

Fig AI at a glance
Free48K monthly visitsHas free access
Pricing

Fig AI Pricing Plans

Compare Fig AI free options, Fig AI paid pricing plans, and usage notes before you choose the best way to use this AI tool in 2026.

Free

Pricing updated:Jun 12, 2026

Features

Fig AI AI Features

Seamless integration with popular terminals, shells, and IDEsIntelligent fig autocomplete and CLI completion specs for hundreds of toolsDashboard for upgrading directly to Amazon Q for command line
Pros & Cons

Fig AI Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Massive community support with 22k GitHub stars and 400+ open-source contributors
  • Significantly improved developer productivity inside the terminal
  • Easy transition path to Amazon Q

Limitations

  • The Fig service has been completely sunset since September 1, 2024
  • No longer actively accepting new user registrations or standalone installations

Fig AI FAQ

Effective September 1, 2024, access to Fig has ended. The Fig team has joined Amazon and has sunset the original product, encouraging all users to migrate to Amazon Q for command line instead.