TL;DREnterprise AI bills are tripling despite a 98% drop in per-token prices, as agentic tools drive consumption 18.6x higher per developer. The Linux Foundation is launching the Tokenomics Foundation to bring cost discipline to AI spending.
Uber blew through its entire 2026 AI coding budget by April. Microsoft revoked its developers’ Claude Code licences six months after enabling them. One company reportedly ran up a $500 million Claude bill in a single month after forgetting to set usage limits. A Priceline employee told TechCrunch that a routine Cursor contract renewal came back four to five times more expensive.
The pattern is the same everywhere. Per-token prices have collapsed, but the push for autonomous AI agents has sent consumption through the roof. Companies that gorged themselves on all-you-can-eat subscriptions in early 2025 are now scrambling to understand where the money went, and whether any of it produced a return.
The paradox in numbers
GPT-4-equivalent performance now costs roughly $0.40 per million tokens, down from $20 per million in late 2022. That is a 98% reduction. Yet enterprise AI bills have risen by an estimated 320%, according to multiple industry analyses. The average enterprise AI budget has grown from $1.2 million per year in 2024 to $7 million in 2026.












