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Currently I explore the Visual Studio 2015 RC and realized that Xamarin Studio is integrated into Visual Studio and its installer. My Question is: Is Xamarin from now on free in Visual Studio?

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11 Answers 11

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Updated March 31st, 2016:

We have announced that Visual Studio now includes Xamarin at no extra cost, including Community Edition, which is free for individual developers, open source projects, academic research, education, and small professional teams. There is no size restriction on the Community Edition and offers the same features as the Pro & Enterprise editions. Read more about the update here: https://blog.xamarin.com/xamarin-for-all/

Be sure to browse the store on how to download and get started: https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/vs/pricing/ and there is a nice FAQ section: https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/vs/support/

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    Why would you want to discourage people from using Xamarin.Forms? And why is Visual Studio support available in the free version but not the paid Indie version? Jul 14, 2015 at 6:16
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    Even though Xamarin looks promising, My personal thinking is, starter edition is restrictive and feels like demo version. This makes developer to refrain from using Xamarin for production application to avoid considerable investment for Xamarin subscription during initial periods and then every year. A considerable lower price slab or more flexible starter edition will be practical. Jul 22, 2015 at 8:50
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    I need to pay 83 dolars per month to get usable product? I'm not company 83 dolars per month for me as a person is ridiculus. What's the point of Xamarin. I don't see any future in that project. I would pay maybe around 20$ if it would have Visual studio support and not have some funny app size limit! Aug 9, 2015 at 22:14
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    prices are way to expensive for indi developer
    – nishantcop
    Sep 6, 2015 at 13:23
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    I've really wanted to try Xamarin for years, but the price tag has always been way too much of an investment and the starter edition's restrictions are just absurd.
    – Saeb Amini
    Nov 19, 2015 at 7:22
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Yes, Xamarin is now free in Visual Studio

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  • @AaronStainback whose answer changed? do you mean the original poster changed which answer they accepted? and why did you post that comment here? this answer is not accepted and wasn't edited. And why are you saying it changed today when an answer, the accepted answer said the same thing months before you wrote that comment
    – barlop
    May 27, 2016 at 9:38
  • @barlop, Microsoft announced on March 31st 2016 that Xamarin would start being free. When I posted this comment, the accepted answer still said basically no Xamarin was not free because when the answer was accepted that was true. Giorgi here was the first to post correctly about Xamarin being free. May 28, 2016 at 16:03
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I asked the same question to Xamarin support team, they replied with following:

You can develop an app with Xamarin for commercial usage - there is no extra charge! We only require you to comply with Visual Studio's licensing terms,

which means that in companies of less than 250 employees with less than $1million USD annual revenue, you may use Visual Studio completely free (including Xamarin) for up to 5 developers.

However after you pass those barriers, you would need a Visual Studio license (which includes Xamarin).


Refer the screenshot below.

enter image description here

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Visual Studio 2015 does include Xamarin Starter edition https://xamarin.com/starter

Xamarin Starter is free and allows developers to build and publish simple apps with the following limitations:

  • Contain no more than 128k of compiled user code (IL)
  • Do NOT call out to native third party libraries (i.e., developers may not P/Invoke into C/C++/Objective-C/Java)
  • Built using Xamarin.iOS / Xamarin.Android (NOT Xamarin.Forms)

Xamarin Starter installs automatically with Visual Studio 2015, and works with VS 2012, 2013, and 2015 (including Community Editions). When your app outgrows Starter, you will be offered the opportunity to upgrade to a paid subscription, which you can learn more about here: https://store.xamarin.com/

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    And Xamarin.Forms is a necessary component to build UI once and deploy to all devices? Feb 25, 2016 at 9:50
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    Yes that is correct. You can still develop UI components for each device separately without it.
    – Moon
    Feb 25, 2016 at 16:24
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    Answer changed today. Xamarin is free for all VS 2015 from today.
    – Sridhar
    Apr 1, 2016 at 0:01
  • @Sree what do you mean.. do you mean that before it was xamarin starter that was free with it but that now it's the full xamarin?
    – barlop
    May 27, 2016 at 9:41
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Seems like now it's free for small teams and students, according to Scott Hanselman post https://twitter.com/shanselman/status/715568774418595840

https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/vs/pricing/

Visual Studio Community
FREE

A free, full-featured and extensible IDE for Windows users to create Android and iOS apps with Xamarin, as well as Windows apps, web apps, and cloud services.

  • Students
  • OSS development
  • Small teams

and

Xamarin Studio Community FREE

A free, full-featured IDE for Mac users to create Android and iOS apps using Xamarin.

  • Students
  • OSS development
  • Small teams
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  • is there a way to have xamarin free on visual studio 2015 enterprise edition? ( i have vs 2015 enterprise )
    – SHM
    Jul 11, 2016 at 9:19
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If you go to the visualstudio.com Visual Studio 2015 RC cross-platform and mobile apps page, then read and scroll to the bottom, it appears that Microsoft is including Xamarin, and upon installing it you do have, as James said, the Xamarin Starter edition. In 2015 RC go to Tools, Xamarin Account to see your Xamarin license. I do not know the limitations, or any expiration date, of this Starter Xamarin Account.

Still, I don't know about you, but the Visual Studio 2015 RC "Community" edition I installed expires in less than 180 days. (Check the Help menu, go to "About...", and click on your license status to check.)

Let's say Xamarin Starter edition is free, but Visual Studio 2015 "Community" has an expiration date. So the bigger question might be whether Visual Studio 2015 "Community" will be free.

Without Xamarin though, Microsoft is offering C++ tools for cross-platform development, but scroll down to the bottom of the page and you might be surprised or confused at the download link description.

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    Visual Studio 2015 Community edition will replace the earlier Visual Studio Express editions and will be free. The only reason for the expiration date is that it is a prerelease version.
    – Jonas
    Jul 9, 2015 at 22:33
  • The last time I read about the 2015 Community edition release, I read "July" somewhere (don't remember where though)...and Microsoft has extended my license anyway.
    – codeReview
    Jul 12, 2015 at 5:54
  • I programmed for several years in C++ many years ago ... and hated it. I was greatly relieved when C# came along. I found it much more productive. Interesting that Microsoft is promoting a C++ cross-platform free download. However, cross-platform C++ really means Windows and Android. Impossible to tell from that link that the mention of iOS is NOT referring to C++, but rather to Xamarin! These days, not on ios nor osx means not usefully cross-platform. Dec 4, 2015 at 9:13
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Visual studio community edition is bundled with xamarin and which is free as well.

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No, it only contains a free 30 day trial. But I think there would be a package if you buy Visual Studio + Xamarin.

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  • It would have been too good to be true. But thanks for your reply. May 18, 2015 at 23:06
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    Answer changed today. Xamarin is free for all VS2015
    – Sridhar
    Apr 1, 2016 at 0:02
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Xamarin is now owned by Microsoft So it completely free to use on Windows and mac as well.

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Yes, Microsoft announced that xamrin is now free with VS15 and other latest versions.

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Visual Studio is now including Xamarin also. You can download Xamarin Studio but this link Make sure to get the Community Edition. it's Free to use

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