A 21-year-old founder accidentally spent $30k on AI tokens in a month
Image: Sarthak Dhawan/ Linkedin A simple setting led to a $30,000 AI bill Why the founder believes the expense paid off AI token costs are
Image: Sarthak Dhawan/ Linkedin A simple setting led to a $30,000 AI bill Why the founder believes the expense paid off AI token costs are becoming a growing concern across the industry Speed may be the most valuable currency for AI startups Artificial intelligence has transformed the way startups build products, allowing small teams to accomplish in weeks what once took months. But that speed comes at a price. Every prompt sent to an AI model consumes computing resources, measured in tokens, and heavy usage can quickly turn into a sizable bill. For many founders, managing those costs has become as important as managing payroll or cloud infrastructure. Yet one 21-year-old entrepreneur believes spending tens of thousands of dollars on AI in just a month was not a mistake, but an investment that helped his company move faster than its competitors.Sarthak Dhawan, the 21-year-old co-founder of AI startup Turbo AI, recently revealed that his company unintentionally spent around $30,000 on AI tokens in a single month. As reported by Business Insider, he prioritises quicker responses but also consumes significantly more tokens, increasing costs.According to Dhawan, the unexpectedly large bill came as a surprise.
However, rather than viewing it as a financial disaster, he described it as the cost of moving quickly during a crucial stage of product development.Turbo AI launched its educational AI application in January 2024 and has since grown into a team of roughly ten employees.Despite the expensive month, Dhawan said the company generally spends around $20,000 each month on AI tools, treating them as a core operational expense rather than an optional luxury.Instead of imposing strict spending caps, the startup has focused on ensuring employees can build and iterate rapidly, believing the productivity gains outweigh the additional costs.For many early-stage companies, spending tens of thousands of dollars on software each month would trigger immediate budget reviews. Dhawan, however, argues that AI is fundamentally changing how software companies operate.He believes engineers today spend less time manually writing code and more time directing AI systems, reviewing generated code and making higher-level architectural decisions. In his view, developers are increasingly becoming supervisors of AI rather than traditional programmers.That shift, he says, allows startups to build products much faster with smaller teams. Although relying heavily on AI can sometimes make developers less familiar with every line of their codebase, Dhawan considers the trade-off worthwhile if it accelerates innovation.The startup has since introduced straightforward measures to avoid similar overspending, including switching from Claude's fast mode to standard mode where appropriate and using smaller AI models for routine tasks.