Not the "top 10 AI tools" listicle you've seen 500 times. This is the actual stack I pay for in July 2026 — plus two free ones I'd happily pay for. If a tool isn't on here, it didn't earn a spot on my card.
1. Claude Max — $100/mo
The powerhouse. This is the engine everything else plugs into. Every automation, every agent, every content system I run lives on Claude — and the Max tier is what makes it usable, because I never hit a limit in the middle of a job.
What it does: Claude at the highest usage tier, plus Claude Code for building and running automations. I use it to draft and edit content in my voice, run agents that research and reach out, write and ship code, and orchestrate the boring multi-step work I used to do by hand.
Why it's worth $100: One subscription replaced a stack of smaller ones and a lot of manual work. If you pay for one thing on this list, pay for this. It's the difference between "I use AI sometimes" and "AI runs half my operation."
What to try: Open Claude Code, point it at one repetitive task you do every week, and let it build the automation for you. Watch how fast the $100 pays for itself.
🔗 claude.com — $100/mo (Max)
2. ChatGPT — $20/mo
What it does: Two things I keep it for — image generation (GPT Image 2) and Codex. The image model is the best I've used for content visuals: thumbnails, carousel slides, ad creative. Codex handles quick coding without me leaving the chat.
Why it stays on the card: It's not my main brain — Claude is — but nothing beats GPT Image 2 for spinning up a hook slide or a thumbnail I can iterate on in seconds. For the visuals alone it earns the $20.
What to try: Give it three reference images you like and ask for three completely different variants of a carousel hook slide. Iterate until one stops you.
🔗 chatgpt.com — $20/mo (Plus)
3. Gemini in Google Workspace — $20/mo
What it does: Puts Gemini inside the Google tools you already live in — Gmail, Docs, Sheets, and Meet. It drafts and replies to emails, summarizes long docs, cleans up spreadsheets, and takes notes in your meetings automatically.
Why it's worth it: The value isn't the model, it's the location. AI that lives inside your inbox and your docs gets used a hundred times a day because there's zero friction. It quietly deletes the admin work that eats your mornings.
What to try: Turn it on in Gmail and let it triage and draft replies for a day. Then let it take notes in your next call — you won't type them yourself again.
🔗 workspace.google.com — $20/mo
4. Wispr Flow — Free
What it does: Dictation that actually works. You talk, it types — cleaned up, punctuated, and formatted in real time — into any app on your machine. Prompts, emails, scripts, notes: all spoken, not typed.
Why it's a cheat code: You think faster than you type, and Wispr Flow closes that gap. Half the prompts I send Claude are dictated — it's the fastest way to get a messy thought out of your head and into a tool. And it's free.
What to try: Dictate your next long prompt instead of typing it. Ramble, let it clean it up, hit send. It feels like a superpower within a day.
🔗 wisprflow.ai — Free
5. Granola — Free
What it does: An AI notepad for meetings. It listens to your calls, transcribes everything, and hands you clean, structured notes and action items afterward — no bot joining the call, no awkward "this meeting is being recorded."
Why it makes the list: I transcribe things all day — calls, brainstorms, voice memos — and Granola turns raw audio into notes I can actually search and reuse. Every good call becomes content, tasks, or a decision I don't have to remember. Free, and better than tools I used to pay for.
What to try: Run it on your next call and don't take a single note yourself. Read what it gives you afterward — you'll trust it by the end of the week.
🔗 granola.ai — Free
The rule
Every tool on this list follows one principle:
AI does the boring work. You do the creative work.
Claude runs the automations → you decide what to build.
ChatGPT makes the visuals → you pick the one that hits.
Gemini clears the admin → you get your mornings back.
Wispr and Granola capture the words → you find the story in them.
The paid ones aren't expensive — they're the cheapest employees you'll ever hire. The free ones are just unfair. This is the July 2026 stack; I'll update it when something new earns a spot.
Made by @artem.novitckii