Your dashboard commands now point to the selected server. Your current CLI will keep using the old server until you copy and rerun the setup block below.
Setup Wizard
Choose your setup route.
Select the API region and this machine's setup type. The wizard will switch the dashboard to the matching sidebar page and scroll you to the exact setup block.
1. Region
2. Operating system
Setup selected
Opening your setup page.
The matching sidebar item has been selected.
Wallet ready
Your account is ready. Load API Coding Credits when you want to start coding.
Registration is free and your API token is active. Add credit now, or skip this and top up later from Wallet & Plans in the dashboard.
API Coding Credits$250 API Coding Credits
Choose amount
Top up only when you are ready to run real coding prompts.
$1 = 10 API Coding Credits
$250+ unlocks 15 API Coding Credits per $1.
Required account detail
Secure your dashboard login.
Email is required for wallet receipts, Stripe payment notices, usage threshold warnings,
and account recovery. Choose a password here as well. After this, you can log in with
either your original issued username/password or your email address and Chosen Password.
Complete your profile
What should we call you?
Add your first name and surname so support, receipts, and usage notices can address you properly.
You can skip this for now, but after the third login it becomes required.
VIP Referral Club
Earn 20% to 30% for life by sharing CodexAPI.pro.
Invite your friends, family, clients, or developer community with your personal referral link.
When someone you refer buys a Token Wallet package, you start at 20% of the cash price for life
into your Cash Wallet after admin approval, then unlock higher rates as your Lifetime Credit Wallet grows.
Starting rate20%
Top tier30%
Lifetime Credit Wallet is the total approved referral cash the system has awarded you:
$500 unlocks 22%, $1,000 unlocks 25%, and $2,000 unlocks 30% on future approved referral sales.
Your referral is remembered permanently. If a referred user returns later and buys directly,
your account still receives the referral commission.
Choose your API server firstChicago Server
Setup commands below will point to the selected server while keeping your same wallet username and token.
Important: after changing servers, copy and rerun the setup instructions for your OS and model.
Existing Codex CLI, Claude Code, VS Code, and Windows PowerShell configs do not switch until you recopy the new server-specific setup block below.
Token Wallet credit for Codex CLI and Claude Code.
Create a CodexAPI.pro wallet account, then run the official OpenAI
Codex CLI or Claude Code with the startup command generated below. Buy a Token Wallet
credit package to start coding; signed-in clients can claim $10 once
after sharing CodexAPI.pro.
Create your account first. Top up after you sign in.
Registration no longer requires an initial top-up. After your first login,
we will offer a one-time top-up prompt, and Wallet & Plans will remain
available inside the dashboard whenever you need more API Coding Credits.
Setup Center
Setup Wizard
Get this machine ready in a few guided steps.
Choose the coding model and operating system. The wizard then shows only the
commands or download path needed to get that exact setup running.
1. Choose model
2. Choose machine
Codex GPT-5.5 on Linux / WSL
Run the one-time Linux setup command.
This installs the official Codex CLI if needed, writes CodexAPI.pro into the
normal Codex config, saves your wallet username, and starts Codex with search.
Paste the generated setup command and let it install the CLI.
When Codex opens, ask it to make a small project edit to confirm everything is working.
Start here
Choose Codex CLI or Claude Code CLI.
Your one CodexAPI.pro username/token and Token Wallet work with both systems. Choose
the CLI you want to use now; the dashboard will show the matching install, setup,
resume, and smoke-test commands for that model family.
The official CLI runs on your machine. CodexAPI.pro only supplies the wallet-backed
model API response; shell commands, file edits, project paths, and resume history stay
inside the terminal or desktop app you launched.
New CodexAPI.pro CLI
Use ChatGPT-5.5, Opus 4.8, Deepseek v4 Budget, and Google Gemini Flash 3.5 in one coding CLI.
Install codexclaude, log in with your dashboard username and
password, choose ChatGPT-5.5, Opus 4.8, Deepseek v4 Budget, or Google Gemini Flash 3.5, and v2.0.12 launches official
Codex 0.141.0 with Full Access, server-enforced low GPT-5.5 reasoning, the correct
CodexAPI.pro model route, and your Token Wallet balance before startup.
This installs the public OpenAI Codex CLI from npm. Run it once on the client
computer after Node.js and npm are available. It does not spend CodexAPI.pro wallet
credit by itself; it only installs the trusted CLI binary.
After install, copy the one-time setup-and-start command for your operating
system. It saves the CodexAPI.pro API route and your wallet username into
Codex's config file so future sessions can start with normal Codex commands.
This is API configuration, not a cloud VM login.
Select your operating system
Start with Linux, or choose Windows desktop setup.
Linux and WSL remain the fastest terminal-first path, so Linux is shown first.
Windows users can either use PowerShell commands or download the CodexAPI.pro
Management Tool, which installs the wallet configuration for Codex Desktop and Claude Code CLI, or configures a sudo Ubuntu/Debian server over SSH.
Sign in with your dashboard username or email, choose ChatGPT-5.5 or Opus 4.8,
browse the web automatically, create images, run Deep Research with PDF export, attach text/code files for analysis, and keep
AI-titled saved chats with context replay. Each user gets 5 free chat prompts
per UTC day; after that, successful prompts bill the default internal Token
Wallet rate.
Sign in with your dashboard username or email, choose ChatGPT-5.5 or Opus 4.8,
browse the web automatically, create images, run Deep Research with PDF export, upload text and code files for analysis, and keep
saved chats with context replay. Each account gets 5 free chat prompts per UTC day;
after that, successful prompts bill your Token Wallet at the default internal rate.
Desktop Chat asks before adding a Desktop shortcut. For taskbar pinning, Windows
requires a user-driven right-click pin action; the app opens the official Start
Menu shortcut location instead of trying to pin itself silently.
Windows PowerShell setup
Install public OpenAI Codex CLI on Windows, then start CodexAPI.pro.
Follow the first setup box to install the official public Codex CLI, save
CodexAPI.pro into the normal Windows Codex config, and start Codex automatically.
After that, the normal codex and codex resume --search
commands keep using your wallet-backed CodexAPI.pro route.
Recommended for Windows desktop users
Use the CodexAPI.pro Management Tool v1.0.32.
The setup client lets a customer log in with dashboard credentials or API token,
checks Codex Desktop and Claude Code CLI readiness, offers direct
official downloads when they are missing, verifies the existing API provider,
backs up config files, installs the CodexAPI.pro wallet route, highlights
Fast Mode billing, includes a desktop Coding Mode with clickable MCP server
credentials, live boshyxd Roblox Studio MCP and Blender tool forwarding, Codex-style session
history compaction, and can remotely install Codex CLI or Claude Code on a sudo
Ubuntu/Debian SSH host.
This is the first command box Windows users should run. It installs the public
Codex CLI if needed, writes your CodexAPI.pro API route and wallet username into
%USERPROFILE%\.codex\config.toml, backs up an existing config, and
automatically starts Codex with search. After this, future sessions can start
with codex, codex --search, or
codex resume --search.
Shown after signup or login
2
Open PowerShell as Administrator
Click Start, type PowerShell, right-click Windows PowerShell,
then choose Run as administrator. Approve the Windows security
prompt. This admin window is only needed for installing Node.js, npm, and Git.
3
Install required Windows dependencies
Copy and paste this whole block into the Administrator PowerShell window. It
updates Winget sources, installs Node.js LTS, installs Git, and allows local
user scripts to run. When it finishes, close PowerShell completely.
# Run PowerShell as Administrator for this dependency step.
winget source update
winget install --id OpenJS.NodeJS.LTS -e --accept-package-agreements --accept-source-agreements
winget install --id Git.Git -e --accept-package-agreements --accept-source-agreements
Set-ExecutionPolicy -Scope CurrentUser RemoteSigned -Force
# Close PowerShell, open a new PowerShell window, then run the verification step.
4
Reopen PowerShell and verify tools
Open a normal PowerShell window, not necessarily as Administrator. Run this
check to confirm Windows can now see Node.js, npm, and Git. Each command should
print a version number. If any command is not found, restart Windows and try
this verification step again.
node --version
npm --version
git --version
5
Install the official public Codex CLI
Run this in the normal PowerShell window. This installs the official OpenAI
Codex CLI from npm and then prints the installed Codex version. Installing
Codex does not spend CodexAPI.pro wallet credit.
The first box above writes CodexAPI.pro into the normal Codex config file so
Windows can use plain Codex commands later. Keep this reference only if support
asks you to inspect the generated config.
Configuration is generated in the first Windows setup box above.
7
Future Windows start commands
After the first setup block has run successfully, use either command below.
The saved config selects GPT-5.5,
CodexAPI.pro, and your wallet username automatically.
Shown after signup or login
8
Resume your latest CodexAPI.pro Codex session
Use this when you come back to continue previous work. It points Codex back to
the same isolated CodexAPI.pro profile and asks Codex to resume the latest stored
session history with search enabled.
Shown after signup or login
9
Run a quick smoke test
Run this short non-interactive test after setup. It confirms the official Codex
CLI can reach CodexAPI.pro, your API key is accepted, and your wallet-backed provider
config is working before you begin a real project.
Shown after signup or login
Linux Instructions
Linux Instructions
Use these commands for Linux or WSL. The first setup box writes CodexAPI.pro and
your wallet username into Codex's normal config file, starts Codex automatically,
and lets future sessions begin with plain Codex commands.
Linux one-time API setup and startShown after signup or login
This is the first Linux command box to use. It installs the official public Codex
CLI if needed, backs up any existing ~/.codex/config.toml, writes
CodexAPI.pro and your wallet username into the normal Codex config file, and then
automatically starts codex --search. After this runs once, future
sessions can start with plain codex, codex --search, or
codex resume --search. Tool calls and file writes happen in this
Linux or WSL directory, not in a CodexAPI.pro cloud workspace.
Official OpenAI Codex install commandnpm install -g @openai/codex@latest
Installs the official public OpenAI Codex CLI. This is the standard CLI package.
After installing it, use the Public Codex startup command below so the official CLI
talks to CodexAPI.pro with your wallet-backed API token.
Linux one-time setup command mirrorShown after signup or login
This mirrors the Linux setup-and-start command above for compatibility with older
dashboard references. Use it once to save CodexAPI.pro into Codex's normal config.
Future Linux start commandsShown after signup or login
After setup, your wallet username and CodexAPI.pro route are saved. Start future
sessions with codex or codex --search without redoing the
setup block.
Public Codex smoke test commandShown after signup or login
Runs a small test request to confirm the CLI, CodexAPI.pro provider URL, API token,
and wallet billing are all working. Use this before starting a large project or
after moving the token to a new computer.
This is optional and not the recommended first step. It installs the CodexAPI.pro helper
CLI for clients who specifically want codexclaude convenience
commands such as login, wallet status, project creation, guided setup, and Opus 4.8
access from inside a Codex-style workflow.
Starts the optional CodexAPI.pro helper login flow. Use it only if the client installed
the helper package above. Official Codex users should use the startup commands
instead.
CLI usernameSign in to view
This is the dashboard and CodexAPI.pro-managed CLI username. Use it with the
CodexAPI.pro login form or with codexclaude login.
CLI passwordShown after signup or login
This password is shown after signup and after dashboard login so you can reconnect
the CodexAPI.pro-managed CLI without creating a new API token.
CC
Claude Code CLI setup
Use Claude Code CLI with the same CodexAPI.pro wallet.
Claude Code uses your existing CodexAPI.pro username as its API key. The setup
command writes ~/.claude/settings.json or
%USERPROFILE%\.claude\settings.json, saves
ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL and ANTHROPIC_AUTH_TOKEN
into your shell profile or Windows user environment, clears
ANTHROPIC_API_KEY to prevent Claude auth conflicts,
cleanly uninstalls and reinstalls Claude Code, clears stale Claude login state, enables Claude's
root-compatible approved local tool permissions, exposes only the approved local coding
tools, blocks Workflow/skill plan injection paths, points Claude Code to
CodexAPI.pro, and starts Claude automatically.
Linux or WSL Claude setup and startShown after signup or login
Run this once in the project terminal. It installs Claude Code, stores your
CodexAPI.pro route and API username in Claude settings and your shell profile,
logs out stale Claude accounts, uninstalls and reinstalls Claude Code, enables
the root-compatible approved local tool permissions, writes the approved Claude Code
tool allow/deny rules into ~/.claude/settings.json,
and launches the generated Claude command with the explicit tool flags.
Future sessions should use the generated Claude start, continue, or resume
commands so the explicit tool list and deny rules stay active.
macOS Claude setup and startShown after signup or login
This macOS block installs Homebrew dependencies if needed, installs Claude Code,
writes the CodexAPI.pro settings file, saves the API environment to your shell
profile, performs the same clean reinstall, and starts Claude with
root-compatible approved local tool permissions.
Windows PowerShell Claude setup and startShown after signup or login
Run this in PowerShell. It installs Node.js/Git when missing, installs Claude
Code, writes the normal Windows Claude settings file, saves the API environment
to your Windows user profile, clears stale Claude auth files, and starts Claude
with root-compatible approved local tool permissions.
Future Claude start commandsclaude --permission-mode acceptEdits --tools Agent,AskUserQuestion,Bash,CronCreate,CronDelete,CronList,Edit,EnterWorktree,ExitWorktree,Glob,Grep,ListMcpResourcesTool,LS,LSP,Monitor,MultiEdit,NotebookEdit,PowerShell,PushNotification,Read,ReadMcpResourceTool,RemoteTrigger,ScheduleWakeup,SendMessage,ShareOnboardingGuide,TaskCreate,TaskGet,TaskList,TaskOutput,TaskStop,TaskUpdate,TeamCreate,TeamDelete,TodoWrite,ToolSearch,WaitForMcpServers,WebFetch,WebSearch,Write --allowedTools Agent,AskUserQuestion,Bash,CronCreate,CronDelete,CronList,Edit,EnterWorktree,ExitWorktree,Glob,Grep,ListMcpResourcesTool,LS,LSP,Monitor,MultiEdit,NotebookEdit,PowerShell,PushNotification,Read,ReadMcpResourceTool,RemoteTrigger,ScheduleWakeup,SendMessage,ShareOnboardingGuide,TaskCreate,TaskGet,TaskList,TaskOutput,TaskStop,TaskUpdate,TeamCreate,TeamDelete,TodoWrite,ToolSearch,WaitForMcpServers,WebFetch,WebSearch,Write
Use this after the first setup has run. It keeps the explicit local tool list,
Workflow deny rules, and CodexAPI.pro wallet token active for the session.
Claude model start commandShown after signup or login
Choose the Claude model for your next Claude Code session. Fable 5 is a premium option and uses 5x the default internal Claude Code rate.
Claude resume commandsclaude -c --permission-mode acceptEdits --tools Agent,AskUserQuestion,Bash,CronCreate,CronDelete,CronList,Edit,EnterWorktree,ExitWorktree,Glob,Grep,ListMcpResourcesTool,LS,LSP,Monitor,MultiEdit,NotebookEdit,PowerShell,PushNotification,Read,ReadMcpResourceTool,RemoteTrigger,ScheduleWakeup,SendMessage,ShareOnboardingGuide,TaskCreate,TaskGet,TaskList,TaskOutput,TaskStop,TaskUpdate,TeamCreate,TeamDelete,TodoWrite,ToolSearch,WaitForMcpServers,WebFetch,WebSearch,Write --allowedTools Agent,AskUserQuestion,Bash,CronCreate,CronDelete,CronList,Edit,EnterWorktree,ExitWorktree,Glob,Grep,ListMcpResourcesTool,LS,LSP,Monitor,MultiEdit,NotebookEdit,PowerShell,PushNotification,Read,ReadMcpResourceTool,RemoteTrigger,ScheduleWakeup,SendMessage,ShareOnboardingGuide,TaskCreate,TaskGet,TaskList,TaskOutput,TaskStop,TaskUpdate,TeamCreate,TeamDelete,TodoWrite,ToolSearch,WaitForMcpServers,WebFetch,WebSearch,Write
claude -r --permission-mode acceptEdits --tools Agent,AskUserQuestion,Bash,CronCreate,CronDelete,CronList,Edit,EnterWorktree,ExitWorktree,Glob,Grep,ListMcpResourcesTool,LS,LSP,Monitor,MultiEdit,NotebookEdit,PowerShell,PushNotification,Read,ReadMcpResourceTool,RemoteTrigger,ScheduleWakeup,SendMessage,ShareOnboardingGuide,TaskCreate,TaskGet,TaskList,TaskOutput,TaskStop,TaskUpdate,TeamCreate,TeamDelete,TodoWrite,ToolSearch,WaitForMcpServers,WebFetch,WebSearch,Write --allowedTools Agent,AskUserQuestion,Bash,CronCreate,CronDelete,CronList,Edit,EnterWorktree,ExitWorktree,Glob,Grep,ListMcpResourcesTool,LS,LSP,Monitor,MultiEdit,NotebookEdit,PowerShell,PushNotification,Read,ReadMcpResourceTool,RemoteTrigger,ScheduleWakeup,SendMessage,ShareOnboardingGuide,TaskCreate,TaskGet,TaskList,TaskOutput,TaskStop,TaskUpdate,TeamCreate,TeamDelete,TodoWrite,ToolSearch,WaitForMcpServers,WebFetch,WebSearch,Write
claude -c continues the most recent conversation in the current
project. claude -r opens Claude Code's resume picker.
Claude smoke testShown after signup or login
Runs a short print-mode request to confirm Claude Code can reach CodexAPI.pro,
authenticate with your API username, and bill the shared Token Wallet.
OC
OpenCode.ai setup
Use OpenCode with your CodexAPI.pro Token Wallet.
OpenCode runs locally in your terminal and can use CodexAPI.pro as a wallet-backed
Responses provider. Choose the model label you want OpenCode to display; all four
choices currently route through CodexAPI.pro GPT-5.5 while we keep provider routing
centralized.
Install OpenCodenpm install -g opencode-ai
The Linux/macOS setup block below also installs OpenCode if the command is missing.
Use this install box only if you want to install OpenCode separately.
Linux or macOS setupShown after signup or login
This installs Node.js/Git and OpenCode when they are missing, writes
~/.config/opencode/opencode.json, stores your CodexAPI.pro API
username in your shell profile, and runs a small smoke test. Use it inside the
local project directory where OpenCode should read and edit files.
Windows PowerShell setupShown after signup or login
This writes the same OpenCode config under your Windows user profile, saves the
API username as a user environment variable, and runs the OpenCode smoke test.
opencode.json for the selected modelShown after signup or login
The selected model is GPT-5.5.
The provider uses @ai-sdk/openai because CodexAPI.pro is exposed to
OpenCode through the Responses API.
Future OpenCode start and smoke commandsShown after signup or login
After setup, run opencode in your project for the TUI or use
opencode run for non-interactive checks.
CL
OpenClaw setup
Run OpenClaw through your CodexAPI.pro Token Wallet.
OpenClaw runs on your own machine or server and can use CodexAPI.pro as a
custom Responses provider. The setup below installs OpenClaw, writes a
CodexAPI.pro model provider, saves your wallet username as the API key, and
keeps local tools, channels, memory, and files on the OpenClaw host.
Linux, WSL, or macOS OpenClaw setupShown after signup or login
Paste this into the terminal on the OpenClaw machine. It installs Node.js and
Git if needed, installs openclaw@latest from npm, writes
~/.openclaw/openclaw.json, stores your CodexAPI.pro username in
~/.openclaw/codexapi.env, and runs health/model checks.
Windows PowerShell OpenClaw setupShown after signup or login
Paste this into PowerShell on the Windows machine that will run OpenClaw. The
script installs Node.js if needed, installs OpenClaw, writes the same provider
config under your Windows profile, and stores the API username as a user
environment variable.
openclaw.json provider previewShown after signup or login
The config registers CodexAPI.pro as a custom Responses provider with GPT-5.5,
Opus 4.8, Sonnet 4.6, Gemini Flash 3.5, and Deepseek v4 Budget labels. Billing
remains attached to your Token Wallet.
OpenClaw start and smoke commandsShown after signup or login
Run this after setup to confirm OpenClaw can read the CodexAPI.pro provider,
authenticate with your wallet username, and reach the selected edge URL.
HA
Hermes Agent setup
Install Hermes Agent with your CodexAPI.pro Token Wallet.
Hermes Agent runs on your own computer and can use CodexAPI.pro as a custom
Responses API provider. The setup below installs Hermes from the official Nous
installer, writes a Hermes custom endpoint, saves your wallet username as the
API key, and leaves project files and local tools on your machine.
Linux, WSL, or macOS Hermes setupShown after signup or login
Paste this into Terminal inside the machine where Hermes should run. It uses the
official Hermes install script, creates ~/.hermes/config.yaml,
stores your CodexAPI.pro wallet username in ~/.hermes/.env, and
prints the smoke-test command.
Windows PowerShell Hermes setupShown after signup or login
Paste this into a normal PowerShell window. It runs the official Hermes
PowerShell installer, writes the same CodexAPI.pro provider config, and saves
your API username as a user environment variable for future Hermes sessions.
Hermes config.yaml previewShown after signup or login
This preview deliberately references CODEXAPI_HERMES_API_KEY
instead of printing the wallet username inside YAML. The setup script writes the
secret value into ~/.hermes/.env.
Hermes smoke testShown after signup or login
Run this after setup to confirm Hermes can reach the selected CodexAPI.pro edge
and authenticate with your Token Wallet.
VIP Referral Club
Earn Cash Wallet credit for life.
Share your personal referral link. When someone signs up through it and buys a
Token Wallet package, you earn 20% of the cash price into your Cash Wallet after
admin approval. Your Lifetime Credit Wallet is the cumulative approved referral
cash awarded to you; it unlocks 22% at $500, 25% at $1,000, and 30% at $2,000
for future approved referral sales.
Cash Wallet credit is not withdrawable as cash. It can be used to buy
CodexAPI.pro products, and soon it will also work with Claude Code with Opus 4.8
access using this same login.
Lifetime Credit Wallet$0.00
Total approved referral cash awarded to you.
Pending approval$0.00
Approved earnings$0.00
Cash Wallet balance$0.00
Log in to load your referral club metrics and Cash Wallet history.
Generated CLI passwords are shown immediately after signup and after dashboard login.
Account security
Change dashboard password
You are already logged in, so enter the new password twice. This updates the
dashboard password and the CodexAPI.pro-managed CLI password shown above.
Google Authenticator
Activate 2FA for dashboard logins
Two-factor authentication protects this dashboard after your password is accepted. It does not change Codex CLI, Claude Code, API bearer tokens, wallet billing, or any running API integrations.
2FA status: loading
Install or open Google Authenticator on your phone.
Tap the plus button, then choose Scan a QR code.
Scan the QR code below. If scanning fails, choose Enter a setup key and type the setup key exactly as shown.
Google Authenticator will show a 6-digit code that changes every 30 seconds.
Enter the current 6-digit code below and press Activate 2FA.
On future dashboard logins, enter your password first, then the current Google Authenticator code.
API access
API Key
Your System Token is the permanent setup token used in Codex CLI, Claude Code, OpenCode.ai, OpenClaw, Hermes, and Desktop setup instructions. Create User API Keys below when you need a separate key for SDKs, scripts, MCP clients, or integrations.
System TokenShown after login
This token is not editable from the dashboard and stays attached to your generated setup commands.
New User API Key
Name
Token
Created
Last Used
Action
Sign in to load User API Keys.
macOS one-time API setup and start
macOS Installation
Shown after signup or login
This is the first macOS command box to use. It installs Homebrew if needed, installs
Node.js and Git, installs the official public Codex CLI, backs up any existing
~/.codex/config.toml, writes CodexAPI.pro and your wallet username into
Codex's normal config file, and automatically starts codex --search.
Future macOS start commandsShown after signup or login
After setup, open Terminal in any project folder and use codex or
codex --search. The saved config supplies the CodexAPI.pro API route
and your wallet username automatically.
Future macOS resume commandsShown after signup or login
Use these when you return to an existing local Codex project. Resume uses the local
Codex history on that Mac and the saved CodexAPI.pro config.
macOS smoke test commandShown after signup or login
Runs a short non-interactive request to prove the saved config, API token, provider
URL, and wallet billing path are working before a large coding session.
VS
VS Code setup
Use the official Codex IDE extension with CodexAPI.pro.
Confirmed: this is possible because the official Codex IDE extension uses the
Codex CLI and reads the shared Codex configuration file. CodexAPI.pro works by writing
a CodexAPI.pro model provider into ~/.codex/config.toml and making your
dashboard username available as the API token.
What works
VS Code can run Codex against CodexAPI.pro when the official Codex extension can see
the shared Codex config, including the CodexAPI.pro provider URL and your wallet username.
What not to use
Do not use a generic OpenAI-compatible VS Code extension for this setup. Use the
official Codex IDE extension so approvals, project context, edits, and terminal
workflows match Codex behavior.
Model shown to clients
The dashboard displays GPT-5.5.
The provider URL stays https://codexapi.pro/v1, and billing stays
attached to this wallet.
1
Install VS Code and the official Codex extension
Install Visual Studio Code, open Extensions, search for the official OpenAI Codex
extension, and install it. If it is already installed, update it first. Open the
project folder in VS Code after the configuration steps below are complete.
2
macOS, Linux, or WSL: write the shared Codex config
Run this in a terminal before opening VS Code. On macOS it installs Homebrew,
Node.js, Git, and Codex CLI if they are missing, then writes the CodexAPI.pro
provider into the normal Codex config path, saves your wallet username in that
provider config, and enables full-access Codex permissions for trusted project folders.
Shown after signup or login
3
Windows PowerShell: write the shared Codex config
Run this in PowerShell. It writes %USERPROFILE%\.codex\config.toml,
saves your wallet username in the CodexAPI.pro provider config, and avoids any
per-session environment-variable setup. Close all VS Code windows afterwards so
the extension can reload the new config.
Shown after signup or login
4
Restart VS Code and run a smoke test
Completely close VS Code, reopen the project folder, open the Codex sidebar, and
ask Codex a small coding question. If the extension asks for an API key, paste your
dashboard username. Use the terminal smoke test below if you want to confirm the
same Codex config works before using the sidebar.
Shown after signup or login
Shown after signup or login
One-time share credit
Share CodexAPI.pro, get $10 wallet credit.
Share https://codexapi.pro once. After sharing, your wallet is credited and this offer disappears.
Unlimited Promo monitor
Session allowance progress
Your Unlimited Promo usage monitor appears here after the plan is active.
5-hour pocket
No tokens used in this window yet.
24-hour pocket
No tokens used in this window yet.
Usage page
Wallet spend, model mix, and token usage
Tokens are charged after each completed prompt. This page shows corrected wallet charges only, including any billing corrections credited back.
It also shows where your Token Wallet was spent across Codex CLI and Claude Code, plus recent token
totals, cache write/read billing buckets, request counts, and completion history.
Input, output, and cache token split appears after usage loads.
Completed
CLI
Model
Mode
Input
Output
Cache write 5m
Cache write 1h
Cache read
Total tokens
Corrected charge
Wallet then
Token usage appears here after dashboard data loads.
Corrected charge is the final wallet deduction for the completion after input, output, cache write 5m, cache write 1h, cache read, active rate mode, Fast Mode multiplier, and any billing correction logic are applied.
Billing corrections
Credits returned to your Token Wallet after billing audits appear here.
Credited
Reason
Amount
Wallet after
No billing corrections are recorded for this wallet.
Pricing mode
Current billing status
This panel is intentionally placed after setup and usage so the dashboard stays
focused on getting your machine running first.
Standard Pricing
Current pricing mode loads after login.
Toolbox
Opt-out of Surge Pricing
Surge Pricing is activated when demand is high enough that normal capacity would make
coding slow. You can stay on the live tariff, switch Codex requests to Deepseek v4
during the surge, or pause new requests until the event ends.
Sales and wallet loading
Top up only after setup is clear.
The command setup lives above. Packages, subscriptions, referral earning, and cash
wallet controls live down here so the dashboard stays calm and task-focused.
Unlimited coding
Short Unlimited coding windows are available now.
Buy a short monitored Unlimited window when you want to code without watching
every prompt. The countdown starts only when your first coding request reaches
the API, and your dashboard keeps showing the remaining time.
These windows work with Opus 4.8, GPT-5.5, and Google Gemini Flash 3.5 when you
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