14:32 — now
Your accounts,
on autopilot.
llmpilot books fresh windows on a 24h timeline, keeps idle tokens fresh, and switches to headroom before the wall — while you sleep or ship.
$ brew install alicicek/tap/llmpilot
chained — guaranteed · rides the 09:00 reset
fresh window from 04:00 — you were asleep
- chained — guaranteed · rides the 09:00 reset
- fresh window from 04:00 — you were asleep
all day — in your prompt
One line, every account.
The statusline lives inside Claude Code and shows real limits for the account you are on — plus where the autopilot would switch next. This is the real render, from the shipped binary.
drag to reorder — the full editor lives in the cockpitclick a usage segment to cycle percent → bar → time
04:00 — fresh window fired
What runs while you don't.
- watches — real limits, every account
- nudges — idle tokens stay fresh
- switches — headroom before the wall
stale data reads stale — as of 4 min ago, never old numbers in live colors.

the burn-rate projection — it sees the wall coming before you do
19:00 — resets
Install llmpilot.
Signed & notarized — from GitHub Releases.
The core is free and open source. Automatic switching, scheduling, and wake are a one-time Pro purchase.
- open source
- MIT
- zero telemetry
- tokens never leave your Mac
- free core
- one-time Pro
questions
Questions.
Does it need my Claude password or API keys?
No. llmpilot reads Claude Code's own OAuth token from the macOS Keychain (read-only, with your one-time Always Allow) to check usage, and switches accounts through the official claude auth CLI. Tokens never leave your Mac.
Is it safe to run multiple accounts?
llmpilot uses your own logged-in accounts through the official CLI — no reimplemented login, no third-party credentials. It reads the same usage endpoint Claude Code's own /usage screen uses. The README carries Anthropic's verbatim credential policy so you can decide informed.
What is free and what is Pro?
The core is free and open source forever: statusline, cockpit, menu bar, manual switching, analytics, notifications. Pro is a one-time purchase for the autopilot — automatic switching, scheduling, and wake.
Does scheduling work while my Mac is asleep?
It wakes the Mac a couple of minutes early via a privileged helper you set up once. On battery with the lid closed, macOS can defer a wake — llmpilot surfaces a late fire honestly rather than pretending it ran on time.
Any telemetry?
None, ever. No analytics, no phone-home beyond an optional version check you can turn off. Cached data holds percentages and reset times only — never tokens.