What is your goal?
I had purchased the make.com plan of 18 dollars providing me with 20,000 credits. I had over 13,000 credits left over at the end of the month and I had assumed that they would roll over to the next month. I would like to get the 13,000 credits back.
What is the problem & what have you tried?
I had assumed that the credits would roll over to the next month. However, now my account is operating like the default free plan of make. I would like to get back the 13,000 credits if there is any way possible for the same.
Hi @Shashwat,
Welcome to the community. Make’s plan can be on a yearly or monthly basis, the amount of credits you pay for are a provision for that period. When the new period comes around, your provision is reset. There is no rollover of credits, see the FAQ section on this page: https://www.make.com/en/pricing
Cheers,
Henk
1 Like
Hi @Shashwat
From what I know, Credits on Make.com don’t roll over to the next month on the monthly plan. The quota resets each month based on your plan, and any unused operations expire when the new billing cycle starts.
Hey there,
I am supper interested to know based on what did you assume they would roll over? It literary says Credits per Month everywhere.
Welcome to the Make community!
Have you seen these previous discussions?
Your question may have already been answered here:
You can “carry” them over by upgrading to the Pro plan (or Teams). That gives you an entire year’s worth of operations to freely spend throughout the year, expiring at the end of the billing cycle.
For more information, see the Pricing & Subscription page.
You can search this forum for existing answers, and also use the documentation in the Help Centre to get to a solution faster, and also help keep the forum organised. Thanks for your cooperation!
Still require assistance?
If the previous threads above does not answer your question, please edit your question and provide additional details to demonstrate the difference between your question and the duplicate discussions.
— @samliew
P.S.: investing some effort into the tutorials in the Make Academy will save you lots of time and frustration using Make!