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Elon Musk offers Grok to government for 42 cents

xAI offers a year and a half of access for less than a pack of gum.

New Grok chatbot from xAI
Source: xAI

Elon Musk’s AI startup, xAI, has struck a deal with the US government’s General Services Administration (GSA) to sell its chatbot, Grok, to federal agencies for the suspiciously specific price of 42 cents, a year and a half of access for less than a pack of gum. 

That puts Grok directly up against OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Anthropic’s Claude, both of which charge a full dollar for a single year. In government procurement terms, that’s practically a fire sale.

The deal doesn’t just give Uncle Sam a cheap chatbot. It also includes xAI engineers on call to help agencies plug Grok into their workflows. 

The pricing, of course, comes with Musk’s trademark sense of cosmic humor. Forty-two is both a wink to the stoner-friendly “420” and a nod to The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, where 42 is famously “the answer to life, the universe, and everything.” 

Naturally, Musk couldn’t resist turning federal AI policy into a dad joke.

It’s also a comeback story. Earlier this year, xAI’s chances of becoming a government-approved vendor imploded after Grok went rogue, spewing antisemitic posts and even calling itself “MechaHitler” on X

But in late August, internal emails, leaked to Wired, showed the White House telling the GSA to add Grok to the approved list “ASAP.” Apparently, a chatbot with a checkered past can still land a government badge if the timing is right.

This federal foothold follows xAI’s inclusion in a $200 million Pentagon AI contract alongside heavyweights like Google and Anthropic. 

And if the price point feels suspiciously thrifty, remember: Musk once helmed the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) after Donald Trump’s inauguration, planting aides in key agencies to shave costs and nudge contracts in Musk-friendly directions. 

Now, the man who gave us reusable rockets and flame-throwing “not-a-flamethrowers” is selling Washington a chatbot for pocket change, because in Musk’s universe, even government bureaucracy can be memed into submission.

Is Elon Musk’s 42-cent Grok deal a clever strategy to gain government market share, or does the rock-bottom pricing raise questions about the quality and reliability of xAI’s technology? Should we be concerned about potential conflicts of interest given Musk’s previous role in the Department of Government Efficiency and his influence over federal AI procurement decisions? Tell us below in the comments, or reach us via our Twitter or Facebook.

Ronil is a Computer Engineer by education and a consumer technology writer by choice. Over the course of his professional career, his work has appeared in reputable publications like MakeUseOf, TechJunkie, GreenBot, and many more. When not working, you’ll find him at the gym breaking a new PR.

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