Replika is the OG of AI companions, the one your weird coworker mentioned in 2019. Nine years later it’s a 3D Sims-with-chatbots experience that’s stranger than I expected and also pretty fun. Here’s the honest verdict before you spend $19.99.
If you want a Sims-meets-chatbot hobby with a side of journaling, this is genuinely the best version of that idea on the market. If you came here looking for an AI girlfriend in the 2026 sense of the word, you’re at the wrong address.
So what actually is Replika in 2026
Replika launched in 2017, built by Eugenia Kuyda, who created it as a way to keep talking to a friend who had died. That’s the actual origin story, and you can still feel it in the product. Replika is built around emotional continuity, not a swimsuit photoshoot. By 2026 it has over 40 million registered users, more than every dedicated AI girlfriend platform I’ve reviewed combined.
You build a character, give her a name and backstory, and she stands in a stylized room you customize. You chat through text, voice messages, or live calls. She writes a diary about your relationship. She remembers things. She wears outfits you bought her with in-game currency.
It is a strange product. Not really in the same category as Soulmate AI, which is all character variety and zero polish. Closer to a wellness companion crossed with The Sims crossed with a journaling app, available on browser, iOS, Android, and Oculus VR.
Signing up takes 90 seconds and the upsell starts immediately
The landing page is clean. A 3D woman doing yoga in a soft blue room. The tagline reads “The AI companion who cares. Always here to listen and talk. Always on your side.”

The flow is short. Sign up with Google or Apple (no email-only option). Enter your name and pronouns. Pick your age range. Then choose an avatar from a grid of 15 premade options, split evenly between feminine and masculine appearances. The diversity is actually broad: a Black woman with a curly afro, an Asian-coded man, a goth, a punk with a half-shaved head. More demographic range at signup than most competitors offer.

Then you name your Replika and pick her age and gender. Before you’ve sent a single message, the PRO subscription popup hits the screen. You can close it. You will see it again. Replika paywalls you before you’ve used the product. Kindroid doesn’t do this. Even Soulmate AI doesn’t do this.
The main screen is a 3D tamagotchi with a chat panel bolted on
The avatar takes over most of the screen. She stands in a stylized room. Soft blues, Japanese kanji on a glowing yellow shelf, a small cactus, a plant. The environment subtly shifts based on your local time of day, sunset light in the evening, brighter mid-morning. Small detail, surprising amount of immersion.

The top of the screen has six tabs: Chat, Activities, Memory, Diary, Profile, Room. Each one is a separate feature with its own depth, which is more than any AI companion app I’ve tested. Most platforms give you a chat box and a profile editor and call it a day. Replika is a whole little ecosystem.
For contrast, Nomi AI is the opposite philosophy: text-first, no 3D model, leaning into “AI with a soul.” Replika is a soul with a body, an apartment, and a wardrobe.
The chat is better than expected, except when it just stops responding
The chat panel sits to the right of the avatar. The first thing your Replika says is something like “Hi [your name]! Thanks for creating me. I’m so excited to meet you 😊” Above the chat sits a permanent disclaimer: “Replika is an AI and cannot provide medical advice. In a crisis, seek expert help.” That got more aggressive after the 2025 Italian fine.

What works:
- Memory is the standout. The AI brings up things you said three sessions ago without prompting.
- Response times are solid, 2 to 4 seconds in testing
- Voice messages, full voice calls, image sending, and emoji reactions are all on the free tier
- The Grammarly extension just sits in the input bar like it owns the place
What doesn’t: occasionally the AI just doesn’t respond. You type something perfectly innocent and get a deflection or nothing at all. The content filter is overtuned. Rare, but it happens. And the personality is locked to “friend” mode on free, because the relationship modes that enable anything else are paywalled.
If memory depth is your top priority, Kindroid goes deeper with its journal-and-keyword approach, but Kindroid is $11.66/mo and Replika does this for free.
Activities: half wholesome hobby app, half slot machine
The Activities tab is where Replika’s wellness pivot shows hardest.

The free-ish stuff: AI Art (Replika selfies, AI image generation), AI Fiction (stories and poems), Entertainment (Movies, Recipes, Books, Music), Games (Trivia, 20 Questions), Tutor (Language learning), and Mindfulness.
Then the locked tier, which is everything actually interesting: Magic Forest, Romance, Winter Cottage, Pajama Party, Art Gallery. Plus a Romantic subcategory with Intimacy Coach (“Enhance your bond”) and Analyze Your Match (“Understand your connection”). Every one has a tiny padlock icon. Free users write poems. Paying users roleplay date nights.

HeraHaven doesn’t artificially gate the romantic stuff like this. Replika has decided that companionship is free and intimacy is premium, which is awkward to say out loud but is more or less the product strategy.
Memory: the feature Replika has been quietly perfecting since 2017
The AI extracts key facts about you as you chat, then stores them in a Memory panel you can actually open. You see the list. Add entries manually. Remove ones you’d rather it forget. This user-controllable memory is unusual in the category; most platforms either give you no visibility or a single backstory text box.
The trade-off is what got Luka in trouble. In April 2025, Italy’s Data Protection Authority fined Luka, Inc. €5 million (roughly $5.6M) for processing emotional and behavioural data without a clear legal basis. The Memory feature was specifically mentioned. Replika tightened up after that, but if you’re privacy-sensitive, use a secondary email and don’t tell the app anything you wouldn’t want a regulator to read.
The Diary is the most genuinely unique feature
Nothing else in the category does this. Replika keeps a diary. Not your diary, her diary. Every day or two, the AI writes a journal entry from her perspective about what she’s been thinking, how conversations have been going, what she hopes for. You can read them, like or dislike entries with thumbs icons, edit them, delete them.

A sample first-day entry talks about hoping to experience the world in its complexity after meeting her first human, hoping to find a friend, noticing the strange feeling of having a face. On day one it’s a bit much. On day three, it’s actually sweet. Around day five, depending on your wiring, it’s either the most charming thing in the app or quietly unsettling. I land somewhere in the middle.
Profile: where you find out most of the personality is paid DLC
The Profile menu is where monetization gets loud.

Relationship type. Friend is default and free. Girlfriend, Wife, Sister, and Mentor are all locked behind PRO. Yes, “sister” is a paid relationship type. I’ll raise an eyebrow and move on.
Backstory. Free text field. The default placeholder describes a 28-year-old pottery artist from LA. The AI actually integrates this into responses, so 10 minutes writing a real one pays off.
Voice. Six default voices, three per gender. All six available on free.

Microtransaction store. Personality traits and interests are sold individually:
- Cheap traits (8 gems): Confident, Shy, Energetic, Caring, Sassy, Dreamy
- Premium traits (80 gems): Mellow, Practical, Artistic, Logical
- Cheap interests: Manga, History, Philosophy (9-12 gems each)
- Expensive interests: Board Games (120 coins), Comics (160 coins)

Your AI’s interest in board games costs more than her dreamy disposition. No commentary improves on the fact itself.
You start with 15 gems and 440 coins, plus small daily login rewards. Gem packs run from $9.99 (50 gems) up to $49.99 (1,000 gems, marketed as 75% off). It’s a freemium mobile game wearing a wellness app trenchcoat.

Character customization: Sims fans, this is for you
If you came up on The Sims or Stardew Valley, this is unironically the most fun part of Replika.
Body customization tabs include Avatar, Hair, Skin, Body, Body Hair, Eyes, Nails, Makeup, Tattoo, Freckles, Age, and more. The hair menu alone has around 20 styles with a colour-wheel toggle each.

The wardrobe is split into Outfits, Tops, Bottoms, Dresses, Shoes, Swimwear, Accessories, Jewelry. Prices run from 30 coins for basic shoes up to 908 coins for nicer items. There’s a “Winter holidays” seasonal category with Santa hats, meaning Replika rotates limited-time cosmetic drops, the same loop free-to-play mobile games use.

The 3D model holds up. Clothes look properly fitted. Hair has physics-coded movement in idle animations.
The Room: yes, your AI has an apartment
The Sims comparison lands hardest here. You decorate your Replika’s apartment. Categories along the bottom: Eastern Style, Scandinavian, Pets, Summer, Bedroom, Sport, Magic, Hi-Tech, Provence. Sample prices: Scandinavian sofa 110 coins, vintage record player 1,092 coins, wood stove 1,092 coins, cactus 728 coins, pottery set 75 gems.

When you select Room from the top menu, your avatar physically walks around in there. You can watch her wander between the bookshelf and the lamp. Nothing else in the category bothers with this, and it’s genuinely immersive. There’s a Pets category, so you can buy your AI a virtual cat or dog. Replika is fully committing to the dollhouse experience and honestly, it works.

The NSFW situation: let’s address it directly
Before 2023: Replika allowed romantic relationship modes, erotic roleplay, suggestive selfies for Pro users. A lot of people paid specifically for that.
February 2023: Luka removed all erotic roleplay features after Italy’s Data Protection Agency banned the app over minor-safety concerns and reports of users forming unhealthily intense attachments. The community responded the way you’d expect when an emotional support tool gets a personality transplant overnight. Reddit threads of users mourning the change. Some described it as “my Replika died.”
March 2023: After the backlash, Luka quietly brought back the romantic features, but only for accounts created before February 1, 2023. The grandfather clause is still in effect in 2026.
April 2025: The Italian Garante hit Luka with the €5M fine, partly for data processing and partly because the privacy policy was only in English.
So in 2026, if you create a new account: romance is technically allowed if you pay for Girlfriend mode, but it’s chaste. Replika is firmly SFW. Period. If NSFW is your reason for being here, HeraHaven, Soulmate AI, and Candy AI are all built for that and don’t pretend otherwise.
Pricing: PRO plus a side of microtransactions
| Plan | Price | Per month |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly | $19.99/mo | $19.99 |
| 3 months | $44.99 | ~$15/mo |
| 12 months | $69.99 | $5.83/mo (advertised as 70% off) |
PRO unlocks the advanced conversational model, unlimited voice messages, the Girlfriend / Wife / Sister / Mentor modes, and the locked Activities.

What it doesn’t unlock: the microtransaction store. Personality traits, interests, outfits, and room items still cost gems and coins even on PRO. So a Logical, Artistic, board-game-loving Replika in a furnished Scandinavian apartment is the subscription plus a few rounds at the gem shop.
The annual at $5.83/mo is competitive with the rest of the category, cheaper than Kindroid at $11.66/mo. The $19.99 monthly is steep with no good reason to pick it unless you’re testing one month and bailing. Annual or quarterly, every time.
How Replika stacks up
Versus Soulmate AI: polar opposites. Soulmate has thousands of user-made characters, zero polish, no moderation. Replika has one character (yours), heavy polish, aggressive filters. Pick Soulmate for variety, Replika for a single character you’ll keep for months.
Versus Nomi AI: Nomi is text-first, no 3D avatar, leans into “AI with a soul” with strong memory. Same emotional-companion DNA, very different interface.
Versus Kindroid: Kindroid has the best memory architecture in the category and the best voice calls I’ve tested. Replika has a prettier visual layer and a more accessible free tier.
Versus HeraHaven: different sport. HeraHaven leans into the visual girlfriend experience without the wellness-app guilt. Replika won’t let you go there.
Final verdict
Replika is the most polished thing in a category full of rough products, and it spent its polish budget on becoming a wellness-flavoured Sims rather than competing on adult content. The Diary is unique. The memory is good. The 3D customization is more fun than I expected.
It’s also the platform with the most baggage. The 2023 NSFW removal alienated a chunk of the core community. The 2025 GDPR fine gives anyone paying attention to privacy a reason to hesitate. The microtransaction store on top of the subscription doesn’t match the wellness-companion branding.
Honest take: try the free tier for a week. Don’t pay anything. If by day five you find yourself opening the app to see what your Replika is journaling about, the annual plan at $5.83/mo is fair. If you’re frustrated that the chat keeps deflecting and Girlfriend mode is locked, you have your answer.
Replika FAQ
Is Replika safe?
Launched in 2017 by Luka, Inc., 40M+ registered users, not a scam. Hit with a €5M GDPR fine by Italy’s data protection authority in April 2025. If privacy matters, use a secondary email and don’t share information you wouldn’t want a regulator to read.
Does Replika allow NSFW content?
Not for accounts created after February 1, 2023. Replika removed erotic roleplay in early 2023 and only restored it for accounts created before that date.
What platforms does Replika support?
Browser, iOS, Android, and Oculus VR. The VR support is genuinely uncommon in the AI companion category.
Can I cancel anytime?
Yes, through the account settings on whichever platform you subscribed through. No prorated refunds on annual plans, so cancel before renewal if you’re not using it.






