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Duck.ai is one of the only AI chat platforms where you can hold a conversation with GPT-5 or Claude Opus without registering an account. Launched by DuckDuckGo in early 2025, it sits inside the company’s existing search and browser ecosystem. You can access it at duck.ai, through the DuckDuckGo browser, or via desktop browser extensions.
Two things set it apart from other AI chat tools. Every conversation goes through DuckDuckGo’s anonymizing proxy before reaching the model provider, stripping out identifying information. Providers such as OpenAI and Anthropic are also contractually prohibited from using those chats for training purposes, which is a meaningful commitment that most direct-to-model platforms don’t offer.
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What is Duck.ai?
Duck.ai is DuckDuckGo’s AI chat service, designed so that you can talk to leading AI models without creating an account or sharing personal data. It’s available at duck.ai, through DuckDuckGo’s browser extensions, and inside the DuckDuckGo app on iOS and Android.
The service routes all conversations through a privacy proxy. Your prompts are anonymized before they reach the AI provider. DuckDuckGo also holds providers to strict contractual limits on data use, meaning chats are not stored on DuckDuckGo’s servers and cannot be used for model training by either party.
It works for typical AI tasks: drafting emails, summarizing documents, answering questions, writing code, and general chat. Privacy-conscious professionals, freelancers, and anyone who wants frontier AI access without a recurring account will find it useful.
Duck.ai: At a glance
|
Attribute |
Notes |
|
Underlying model(s) |
Free: Claude 4.5 Haiku, GPT-4o mini, GPT-5 mini, gpt-oss-120b, Llama 4 Scout, Mistral Small 3 24B. Plus: GPT-4o, GPT-5.4, Claude Sonnet 4.6, Llama 4 Maverick. Pro: adds Claude Opus 4.7. |
|
Best for |
Privacy-conscious users; general AI chat tasks; no-signup AI access |
|
Distinguishing functions |
Privacy proxy routing, no-login access, multi-model switching, voice chat |
|
UI features |
Minimal chat interface with left sidebar for model switching; chat history stored locally on device |
|
Subscription costs |
Free; Plus: $9.99/month or $99.99/year; Pro: $19.99/month or $199.99/year |
|
API pricing |
No public API — consumer product only |
Buy it if…
- You want AI chat without an account. Duck.ai is one of few platforms giving you access to capable models, including GPT-5 mini, without registration or a credit card.
- Privacy matters to your workflow. DuckDuckGo anonymizes every chat through its proxy and holds AI providers to strict data-use agreements, making it a stronger privacy choice than signing up directly with OpenAI or Anthropic.
- You want multi-model value. The Plus plan at $9.99/month pairs GPT-5.4 and Claude Sonnet 4.6 with a full VPN and identity protection, making it genuinely competitive.
Don’t buy it if…
- You need a developer API. Duck.ai has no API. If you’re building products or automations on top of AI models, go directly to OpenAI or Anthropic.
- You already have a VPN. The paid plans bundle AI with VPN and identity services. There’s no AI-only subscription tier, so you may end up paying for things you don’t need.
- You depend on predictable limits. DuckDuckGo doesn’t publish exact daily message limits, which makes it difficult to plan for high-volume or time-sensitive work.
My time with Duck.ai
I tested Duck.ai across the free and Pro tiers over several weeks. On the free tier, the experience is clean and fast with no friction, no sign-up, and six models ready to go. Switching between GPT-4o mini and Claude 4.5 Haiku is a single click. Both handled research queries and writing tasks without issue.
The Pro tier adds Claude Opus 4.7 with extended reasoning. The improvement shows on complex tasks: I ran the same multi-step analytical prompt across the free and Pro tiers. Opus 4.7 returned a more structured and well-reasoned response. For everyday writing or quick lookups, the free tier is more than enough. Pro earns its keep on specialist, multi-step work.
My one persistent frustration was the opacity around usage limits. DuckDuckGo’s policy is to keep limits vague to prevent abuse. During testing I didn’t hit a ceiling on Pro, but I can imagine high-volume users running into walls without much warning.
Duck.ai: Features
The defining feature is the privacy proxy. Every message goes through DuckDuckGo before reaching the AI provider. The company holds providers to contractual restrictions on data use, which matters most if you’re typing sensitive information into an AI: prompts about financial decisions, health issues, or confidential business matters are much less exposed than they would be via a direct provider account.
The free tier’s model roster is unusually strong for a no-login service. Alongside GPT-4o mini and Claude 4.5 Haiku, you also get GPT-5 mini and OpenAI’s gpt-oss-120b, both capable models that would cost real money through direct API access. Meta’s Llama 4 Scout and Mistral Small 3 24B round out the lineup for users who prefer open-weight options.
Paid subscribers get meaningfully stronger models. The Plus plan adds GPT-5.4 and Claude Sonnet 4.6, which excel at long-context tasks and following detailed instructions. The Pro plan goes further with Claude Opus 4.7 and extended reasoning, suited to the kind of multi-step analysis that trips up smaller models.
Voice chat, launched in February 2026, lets you speak to an AI model through an encrypted relay connection. Audio is not stored by DuckDuckGo or OpenAI after the session ends, keeping the privacy principles consistent. The feature currently uses OpenAI as the model provider, so model choice for voice is limited.
File uploads are not yet supported, which is a gap compared to ChatGPT or Claude.ai. If you need to analyze a PDF or document, you’ll need to paste content manually. DuckDuckGo has indicated uploads are on the roadmap.
Duck.ai: User experience
The interface is intentionally minimal. There’s no dashboard, no settings maze, and no onboarding flow. The left sidebar shows your chat history, stored locally on your device rather than on DuckDuckGo’s servers. You switch models by clicking the current model name at the top of the conversation. New users can start a chat in seconds.
AI features are also fully optional. DuckDuckGo lets you hide Duck.ai buttons and AI overlays in search settings, which is a meaningful gesture from a company that treats privacy as more than a marketing position. The option to disable AI without losing other features is something many platforms don’t offer.
Duck.ai: Customer support
DuckDuckGo maintains detailed help documentation at its Help Pages site, covering Duck.ai’s privacy policies, model availability, usage limits, and subscription management. The documentation is well-organized and answers most common questions without requiring you to contact anyone.
There’s no live chat or phone support channel. For subscription or billing issues, you can reach support through the subscription settings menu, but response times aren’t publicized. Businesses planning to rely on the Pro plan for critical work should factor this in when evaluating the service.
Duck.ai: Pricing
- Free: Six models, no sign-up, with unspecified daily usage limits.
- Plus: $9.99/month or $99.99/year, which adds GPT-4o, GPT-5.4, Claude Sonnet 4.6, and Llama 4 Maverick, plus VPN, Personal Information Removal, and Identity Theft Restoration.
- Pro: $19.99/month or $199.99/year, which adds Claude Opus 4.7, extended reasoning, and 2x usage limits versus Plus.
The free tier is one of the best no-login AI offers available right now. Getting GPT-5 mini and Claude 4.5 Haiku at zero cost, with genuine privacy protections, is a hard proposition to dismiss. The Plus plan at $9.99/month undercuts both ChatGPT Plus and Claude Pro (each $20/month) while providing access to frontier models alongside a bundled VPN.
The Pro plan at $19.99/month is harder to recommend to most users. Claude Opus 4.7 with extended reasoning is a premium experience, but only for tasks that genuinely require deep multi-step analysis. There’s no standalone AI-only option, so if you already pay for a VPN elsewhere, you’re likely paying twice. The subscription is available internationally with localized pricing: UK users pay £9.99/£19.99 per month for Plus/Pro respectively, and most EU countries are priced at EUR 9.99/19.99 per month.
Duck.ai: Alternatives you should consider
- ChatGPT: OpenAI’s direct interface costs $20/month for Plus and offers GPT-4o access alongside file uploads and image generation, two features Duck.ai currently lacks. The downside is that ChatGPT requires an account and uses conversation data for service improvements unless you opt out.
- Claude.ai: Anthropic’s own interface gives you Claude Opus at $20/month on the Pro plan and is stronger for deep reasoning work. It requires registration, doesn’t offer multi-model switching, and has weaker privacy protections than Duck.ai’s proxy approach.
- Perplexity AI: A strong alternative if you want AI answers grounded in real-time web search. Perplexity Pro costs $20/month and supports file uploads, though it doesn’t match Duck.ai on privacy routing.
How I tested Duck.ai
- Ran identical prompts covering research queries, email drafting, and complex analytical tasks across the free, Plus, and Pro model tiers to compare quality and speed.
- Reviewed DuckDuckGo’s published privacy documentation, provider contracts policy, and help pages to assess how well its privacy proxy claims hold up.
- Tested the subscription sign-up, model switching, voice chat, and local history access on both desktop and mobile across several sessions.
Response latency on the free tier is slightly higher than a direct ChatGPT session, consistent with traffic being routed through a proxy. The difference was small enough that it wasn’t noticeable mid-conversation. Pro-tier responses were fast regardless of model choice, with Claude Opus 4.7 taking marginally longer on extended reasoning tasks — which is expected given the additional processing involved.
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