4 student discounts for AI services that college students need to know

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4 student discounts for AI services in 2026

Whether you're skeptical of the AI hype or counting on them to get you through finals, the reality is that AI tools are showing up in classrooms whether you asked for them or not.

The upside: many AI companies are actively courting college students with steep discounts. So, if you're a college student hunting for deals on AI services like Gemini or Copilot, this guide's for you.

In addition to the deals in this guide, your college may also offer access to a variety of AI tools at a reduced or free rate. Here are the AI college discounts available right now.

Google Gemini + NotebookLM

Google's student offer is probably the most generous on this list. Eligible college students 18 and older can get the Google AI Pro plan — normally about $20 a month — completely free for a full year. That gets you access to Gemini 3.1 Pro, NotebookLM, Deep Research, and 5TB of storage, among other perks.

NotebookLM is the quiet standout here. You feed it your source material — lecture recordings, PDFs, textbook chapters — and it organizes, summarizes, and lets you ask questions about it. It can even generate audio study guides. Worth noting: set a calendar reminder before the year is up, because it will start charging you automatically.

Sign up at gemini.google/students.

Perplexity Education Pro

Perplexity's AI-powered search tool offers a dedicated student tier, Education Pro, at $10 a month — half the standard price — after verifying your enrollment through SheerID. Beyond the discount, student accounts get expanded citation counts, file and image uploads, access to a guided learning mode with flashcards and quizzes, and broader access to its Academic and Research features. It's a more source-transparent tool than most, which makes it a reasonable choice if you care about where information is actually coming from.

Sign up at perplexity.ai.

Mashable Light Speed

Wolfram Alpha Pro

If your coursework involves a lot of math, physics, or chemistry, Wolfram Alpha Pro has long been a quietly useful tool. The student plan runs $5 a month (billed annually at $60), and it unlocks step-by-step solutions, practice problems, guided calculators for calculus and algebra, and extended computation time. A Premium tier at $8.25 a month adds even more. The free version exists but won't show you how to get to an answer, which is usually the whole point.

Sign up at wolframalpha.com/pro/pricing/students.

Microsoft 365 (with Copilot)

Microsoft actually has two separate offers worth knowing about, and most students don't realize either exists. First, the base Office 365 Education plan — which includes web versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Teams, and Copilot Chat — is completely free for students at eligible institutions, donated directly by Microsoft with no strings attached. If your school qualifies, you may already have access and not know it.

For students who want more than the browser-based versions, Microsoft is currently running a limited-time promotion giving college students 12 full months of Microsoft 365 Premium at no cost, just by signing up with a college email. That tier unlocks the full desktop apps across multiple devices, expanded cloud storage, and deeper Copilot integration baked into the productivity tools you're already using.

The practical advice here: check with your school first. If your institution is already enrolled in Office 365 Education, you have free access to the core tools without doing anything. The premium offer is worth grabbing separately if you need the desktop apps or want more storage.

Sign up at microsoft.com/en-us/education/products/office.

What about ChatGPT?

OpenAI no longer offers a dedicated student discount for ChatGPT, but the good news is that GPT-5.2, one of OpenAI's flagship models, is currently available to all users at no cost. OpenAI also works directly with some universities to provide campus-wide access, so it's worth checking with your school before paying for anything.

A note before you spend anything

Most of these services have free tiers that handle basic tasks reasonably well. Before committing to a paid plan, check whether your college already covers any of these tools — many schools have institutional licenses for Google Workspace, Microsoft, or others. Spending money on software you already have access to is its own kind of homework mistake.

It should also be noted that a discounted subscription doesn't come with a free pass to use these tools however you want. AI policy varies wildly from campus to campus — some professors welcome it as a research aid, others treat AI-assisted work the same as plagiarism, and many fall somewhere in the murky middle.

A few major universities have published approved tool lists, but most haven't yet, so the safest move is to ask before you submit anything. Getting caught submitting AI-generated work as your own isn't just an academic integrity problem — it can follow you. These tools work best when they help you understand the material, not do the thinking for you.

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