If you’ve ever tried subscribing to advanced AI tools, you already know the pain. Monthly bills in the ₹5,000-₹30,000 range are no joke and for students, indie creators and early-career professionals, it’s a serious barrier.
Enter Sub-Hub, the startup that’s challenging this barrier.
Founded by Aditya Singh, a college student at NMIMS, Sub-Hub is a community-driven, subscription-sharing platform with a goal to make expensive AI tools accessible to everyone.
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So, how does it work?
Users join groups for AI tools and the monthly subscription is split among the group, making high end services accessible to students, freelancers and researchers. The platform charges a small service fee to manage the subscriptions and community operations, keeping the entire process transparent and secure.
- “Tech should empower people, not price them out,” says Aditya.
An Explosive Start:
Launched on 12th July 2025, Sub-Hub wasted no time and within just three days of going live, the platform crossed 100 active members and clocked thousands in revenue, without spending a single dollar on marketing.
I didn’t expect it to scale so quickly. The response showed just how big this problem was and how urgently people needed a solution.
Aditya Singh
More Than Just Cost Sharing:
Sub-Hub isn’t just about cheaper AI tools, it’s about access. In India, where premium tech is often limited to metro cities, this platform is breaking that barrier. Now, students and creators from any corner can use the same tools as top professionals. And in a world where AI’s no longer a luxury, that changes everything.
What’s Next for Sub-Hub?
While it’s still early days, Aditya plans to expand the platform’s offerings to include AI tools for graphic design, video editing, and coding assistants.
“It proved there’s a real, urgent need for this,” says Aditya Singh.
Why It Matters?
In a tech ecosystem often dominated by VC backed giants and headline grabbing IPOs, Sub-Hub’s story is refreshingly real. It’s a reminder that some of the most impactful innovations don’t come from boardrooms, they come from young people solving problems for their own communities.
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