
Loadingβ¦

Loadingβ¦
Features, pricing and Editor Score side by side β to help you pick the right education & research tool in 2026.
Quick verdict
On our Editor Score, Elicit and Mathos AI land almost level. Pick Elicit if you want paper search; choose Mathos AI for step-by-step math problem solving. On pricing, each has a free or freemium plan, so cost isn't the deciding factor here.
| Rating | 4.5 / 5 | 4.6 / 5 |
| Pricing | Freemium | Freemium |
| Free tier | ||
| Best for | paper search | step-by-step math problem solving |
AInexfinder Editor Score β our editorial rating from features, value and pricing, blended with verified user reviews where a tool has them.
AI research assistant for literature review
AI math solver and step-by-step tutor
Choose Elicit ifβ¦
Choose Mathos AI ifβ¦
Your use case decides this one: Elicit leans into paper search, while Mathos AI is built for step-by-step math problem solving. Our Editor Score can't separate them (4.5 vs 4.6), so let pricing and feature fit break the tie. Both have a free or freemium tier, so spin up each and keep the one that clicks.
Mathos AI has the higher AInexfinder Editor Score (our editorial rating from features, value and pricing, blended with verified user reviews where a tool has them), but "better" depends on your needs β compare features, pricing and the pros & cons above to decide.
Elicit (freemium) is best for paper search, while Mathos AI (freemium) is best for step-by-step math problem solving. See the full feature and pricing comparison above.
Both have paid plans β pricing depends on your usage tier. Open each tool's review for current prices, and watch for free trials.
Elicit is usually the easier starting point thanks to a lower barrier to entry. Beginners should favour a free tier and a simple interface over raw power.
Other head-to-heads in the same category.
AI Tools Comparison Analyst
Olivia runs side-by-side comparisons and benchmarks, digging into pricing, features, and real-world performance so readers can choose between competing AI tools with confidence.
Senior AI Tools Reviewer
Daniel reviews AI tools the slow way β by actually using them on real projects. His reviews cover what works, what breaks, and who each tool is genuinely a good fit for.
Keep exploring
Last updated June 2026. Comparisons are ranked by our Editor Score (features, value and pricing, blended with verified user reviews where a tool has them) β see our methodology.