Comparison

TokenMaxing vs CodexBar

Both live in your menu bar and watch your AI coding tools — but they answer different questions. CodexBar answers “how much do I have left right now?” — rate-limit windows, reset countdowns, and credit balances across 50+ providers. TokenMaxing answers “what did we actually use, and what did it cost?” — persistent usage and cost history, attributed per repo, per developer, and per account, with teams and OpenTelemetry forwarding.

Full disclosure: TokenMaxing exists because we needed several Claude and Codex accounts tracked separately on one machine — and nothing did it.

Pick CodexBar if

You want a free, open-source menu-bar gauge of what’s left — session and weekly limit windows, reset countdowns, credit balances, and provider status across dozens of AI tools on your Mac.

Pick TokenMaxing if

You want usage tracked over time and attributed per repo, per developer, and per account — even multiple Claude or Codex accounts on one machine — compared on a leaderboard, rolled up across a team, or streamed as cost-enriched OpenTelemetry into your own observability stack.

Feature comparison

FeatureCodexBarTokenMaxing
PriceFree, open-source (MIT)Free to start (hosted)
RunsmacOS menu bar (14+) + CLIHosted dashboard + menu-bar app
Setupbrew install --cask codexbarInstall the desktop app
Core jobRate limits & reset countdownsUsage, cost & attribution history
Providers covered50+ (Codex, Claude, Cursor, Gemini…)Claude Code & Codex
Session / weekly limit windows Yes No
Credit balances & reset credits Yes No
Provider status & incident badges Yes No
Cost in USDLocal cost scans (Codex & Claude) Yes
Multiple Claude / Codex accounts, one machineOne account per providerTracked separately per account
Per-repo attribution No Yes
Per-developer / multi-user No Yes
Team & org rollups No Yes
Persistent history across machines No Yes
Leaderboard & badges No Yes
Shareable profile card No Yes
Cost-enriched OpenTelemetry forwarding No Yes
No account required Yes No
Data stays on your machine YesOpt-in — teams private by default

CodexBar is an independent open-source project by Peter Steinberger. Comparison reflects general capabilities and may change as both tools evolve.

What is CodexBar?

CodexBar is a free, open-source macOS menu-bar app that shows how much of your AI coding limits remain — session and weekly windows, reset countdowns, and credit balances — across 50+ providers like Codex, Claude, Cursor, and Gemini. It adds provider status badges, home-screen widgets, and a bundled CLI. It’s a live gauge for one Mac: no account, and your data stays local.

What is TokenMaxing?

TokenMaxing tracks Claude Code and Codex usage and cost, attributes every token to a repository and a developer, and keeps a persistent history — including when you run multiple Claude or Codex accounts on one machine, each tracked as its own identity. Individuals climb an opt-in leaderboard and share a profile card; teams get private, org-scoped spend visibility and can forward cost-enriched OpenTelemetry into Datadog, Grafana, or Honeycomb.

FAQ

Is TokenMaxing a replacement for CodexBar?

They answer different questions. CodexBar tells you how much quota you have left right now — session and weekly windows, reset countdowns, and credit balances in your Mac menu bar. TokenMaxing records what you actually used over time and attributes it per repository, per developer, and per account, with team rollups and OpenTelemetry forwarding. Plenty of developers run both: CodexBar to pace the day, TokenMaxing for the history and the receipts.

Is CodexBar free?

Yes. CodexBar is free and open-source (MIT), built by Peter Steinberger. Install it via Homebrew or grab the release from GitHub.

Does TokenMaxing show rate limits and reset countdowns?

No — that’s CodexBar’s home turf. TokenMaxing focuses on what you used and what it cost, not how much quota remains in the current window.

Can I track more than one Claude or Codex account on the same machine?

Yes — this is a core TokenMaxing feature. Point the collector at each account’s config directory (say, a personal Claude and a work Claude) and every account is tracked as its own identity, with its own history and attribution. CodexBar shows one signed-in account per provider.

Does CodexBar track cost per repository?

No. CodexBar’s local cost scans estimate total spend for Codex and Claude on that Mac, but nothing is attributed to a repository or developer, and there are no team rollups.

Can I forward my usage data to Datadog, Grafana, or Honeycomb?

Yes. TokenMaxing is OpenTelemetry-native and can forward OTLP into any OTLP-compatible observability stack, with estimated USD cost injected per token. CodexBar is a menu-bar gauge and doesn’t emit telemetry.

Is my usage public?

Only if you want it to be. The global leaderboard is opt-in, and team dashboards are private by default.

More comparisons: TokenMaxing vs ccusage

Know what’s left. Keep what you used.

Keep the menu-bar gauge — then let TokenMaxing keep the history, the attribution, and the cost math. Free to start.