View and manage your License

Install your commercial license key, see what tier you're on, and understand what each tier unlocks for your team.

Plus: three pasted Admin-Agent prompts — a blunt tier-fit call against the locked rows you copied from the page, a one-page memo for finance with the real deltas, and a recommendation that reconciles the tier matrix against how you ship week to week.

Audience Admins
Time ~5 min
Prerequisites Admin permissions on your Auxot account. A license key from your purchase email or invoice if you have one — Auxot also runs on the free tier with no key.
You'll end up with Commercial key installed cleanly (or the free tier confirmed on purpose) — tier cards scanned, feature gates read in plain English rather than from marketing pages alone.

When a tutorial shows italic text in quotation marks, it usually mirrors a label or helper string inside Auxot. Product copy changes between releases — if something reads differently in your workspace, trust what you see on screen.

Callouts with a Worth knowing gold accent are meant as must-read context before you move on. Blockquotes that open with Tip are lighter, optional depth.

Why this matters

Auxot is open-core: you can run it forever on the free tier with one user, unlimited agents, unlimited inference providers, and the full set of base features. Paid tiers (Team, Business, or Enterprise) unlock multi-user accounts, multi-team isolation, and enterprise capabilities. Your license key tells Auxot which tier you’re on. The License page is where you install it, see what you’ve got, and decide if it’s time to upgrade.

Today, get your license key in (if you have one), or take a clean look at what the free tier covers (if you don’t). Either way, you’ll leave knowing exactly which capabilities your team can use right now and which ones a higher tier would unlock.

The License page reads your key, shows what tier you are on, and lists which features are enabled or locked. Admins install or rotate keys; everyone else sees the same enable/lock status.


Quick start

  1. Sign in: open Auxot in your browser and log in.
  2. Open License settings: click Settings in the left menu, then License.
  3. Install your key (if you have one): click Install or update license key, paste the key from your purchase email or invoice (it starts with auxot_lic), click Save.
  4. Review your tier: check the cards at the top: Tier, Renews, and Max users.
  5. Scan the License features list: see what’s enabled at your current tier and what’s locked behind higher tiers.

Done? Your tier is confirmed, and you can see exactly which capabilities your team can use today.


The agent can do that?

Vague “more features” framing is the easiest way to overpay for an upgrade. Paste what the page literally lists alongside how your team operates; skim the reasoning, then reconcile against the actual cost yourself.

1. Blunt-fit check before swiping cards

Chat → Admin Agent:

My team uses Auxot for [brief description — e.g., "small marketing agency, 6 people, mostly drafts and content review"]. We're currently on the [tier name] tier. Looking at what's locked behind the next tier up — [paste the locked features from the License page] — would upgrading actually change anything we'd do, or are we fine where we are? Be blunt.

Why it’s non-obvious: Locked rows look attractive, but the work the team actually does week-to-week often doesn’t change with an upgrade. Describe how the team operates first; only then test each locked feature against that workload.

2. Skeleton memo for finance

If approvals need paper trail, paste scaffolding: still edit totals yourself:

We're upgrading from [current tier] to [target tier] on Auxot. Draft me a one-page memo for finance that explains what changes for the team, what the cost is, what we couldn't do before but can do now, and the timeline for getting it set up. Make it sound like a real person wrote it, not a vendor pitch.

Why it’s non-obvious: Blank approval docs invite vague approval. A structured paste attaches the actual deltas you copied from the License page, so finance has something concrete to review; tighten the voice before finance forwards it.

3. Paste the tier matrix beside how you ship

Before budget moves:

Here's everything Auxot's tiers offer, with the gates: [paste base features and the locked features from the License page]. Looking at how my team actually works — [briefly describe], pretend I asked you to recommend a tier. Which tier would you pick, and which features in your recommendation would I genuinely use vs ignore? Don't tell me what's "best practice" — tell me what fits.

Why it’s non-obvious: Procurement comparisons list every feature; operators care about the small number that the team actually uses every week. Describing your real workflow filters the comparison down to the rows you’d actually use.


Go deeper

What the free tier actually includes

The free tier is genuinely usable, not crippled: that’s the open-core model. With no license key installed, you get:

  • Unlimited inference providers and LLM routing
  • Unlimited tool policies and tool-connector keys
  • Unlimited agents
  • Unlimited credentials
  • Unlimited OAuth providers
  • A single user account on the default team

The things free tier doesn’t have are inherently multi-user / multi-team things: invitations, concurrent sign-ins, and separate teams. If you’re a solo developer or a one-person business, the free tier is the right answer indefinitely. If you have two or more people who need to use Auxot, that’s when you start looking at Team tier.

What each paid tier adds

  • Team tier: unlimited user accounts, invites, and concurrent sign-ins. The “we’re a small business and want everyone in one shared workspace” tier.
  • Business tier: unlimited teams with per-team resources, credentials, and published agents. The “different departments need their own walled gardens” tier. Set up multi-team isolation covers multi-team isolation.
  • Enterprise tier: capabilities defined in your contract. Specific feature set varies; if you’re at the size where Enterprise is the question, you’ll have a sales conversation that defines it.

License keys and renewals

License keys always start with auxot_lic. They get tied to your organization (the Licensed to line on the page). Keep them private: share them only as your agreement allows.

Renewals run on a schedule defined by your purchase: monthly licenses get a 15-day renewal window before expiry, annual licenses get a 30-day window. You can re-install or replace a key only inside that window: outside of it, the renewal check at expiration handles it automatically.

The Danger zone

Experimental features

If you’re an org admin and a license is installed, you’ll see an Experimental features section with feature flag toggles (currently includes “Agentic apps”). These are preview features: they work, but expect rough edges. Toggling them on doesn’t affect your tier or billing; it just changes what surfaces in the product for your org.

Troubleshooting

  • ”No commercial key is installed yet”: you’re on the free tier. If you have a key from a purchase, click Install or update license key and paste it.
  • Install failed with “Something went wrong”: likely a copy-paste issue. The key needs to be the full string starting with auxot_lic. Re-copy from your purchase email: make sure no leading or trailing whitespace.
  • Tier shows “free” after I installed a key: the install probably failed silently. Re-open the modal, paste, save, refresh the page.
  • I’m not an admin and Install/Uninstall buttons are missing: license management is admin-only. Ask your org admin.

Variations & edge cases

  • Free tier doesn’t show a “Renews” date: there’s nothing to renew.
  • ”Max users: Unlimited”: paid tiers don’t impose a per-seat ceiling on the License page itself. Your billing arrangement might still have seat counts, but the License page doesn’t enforce them.
  • License view is readable to all users: non-admin users can see what tier the org is on and what’s enabled, but can’t install or uninstall.
  • Pricing page link: when you’re on the free tier, the page shows a “Compare plans and pricing” link to https://auxot.com/pricing.

Walkthrough

Step 1: Sign in

Open Auxot in your browser and sign in. You need to be an org admin to install or change a license key.

Step 2: Open the License settings page

Click Settings in the left menu, then License. You’ll see one of two states depending on whether a key is installed.

Step 3: If no key is installed, review the free tier or install yours

Without a key, the page shows:

  • An alert saying “No commercial key is installed yet, so this workspace runs on the free tier.”
  • A link: Compare plans and pricing →
  • A button: Install or update license key

If you don’t have a key, you’re done: the License features list shows you exactly what the free tier includes. If you do have a key, click Install or update license key, paste it (it starts with auxot_lic), click Save.

Tip: Paste the key exactly. Auxot does some basic validation on save: if it can’t read your key, you’ll see “Something went wrong.” Common cause: stray whitespace from the copy-paste.

Step 4: Review your tier

The top of the page shows three cards:

  • Tier: Free, Team, Business, or Enterprise. Tied to the key you installed.
  • Renews: the date your license renews. (Free tier shows nothing here.)
  • Max users: the cap on user accounts on this org. Free shows “1,” paid tiers show “Unlimited.”

If you see Licensed to: [Org name] above the cards, that’s the org name embedded in your key.

Step 5: Scan the License features list

Below the tier cards is a feature list. Each row shows either Enabled (you have it) or a tier gate label like Team tier / Business tier / Enterprise tier (you’d need to upgrade to get it).

Base features are always enabled regardless of tier. Tiered features are gated. Look at the locked rows: those are what an upgrade would unlock.

Tip: Don’t decide an upgrade by counting locked rows alone. Paste them through power move 1 above first: blunt answers deserve your numbers too.

Step 6: (Optional) Toggle experimental features

If you’re an org admin and a license is installed, scroll to Experimental features. You’ll see toggles for preview features (currently “Agentic apps”). These are works-in-progress; flip them on if you want to try them, off if you want stability.

Step 7: (Only if needed) Uninstall the license

The Danger zone section at the bottom holds the Uninstall license button. Use this when:

  • You need to switch to a different key (uninstall the old one first).
  • Your team is downsizing and the paid tier is no longer needed.
  • You’re troubleshooting a license-related issue and want to verify free-tier behavior.

A confirmation modal appears before the uninstall actually fires. The workspace immediately drops back to the free tier.


What’s next

Reference