ChatGPT's Codex Profile Now Shows Your Usage Stats and Lets You Share a Personal Card
OpenAI has added activity insights and shareable profile cards to Codex, letting consumer ChatGPT users review and share their usage highlights.
OpenAI has quietly shipped a feature to Codex that feels more personal than most product updates: your usage, your streaks, your milestones, all wrapped up in a profile card you can save and share. It is a small addition in the context of Codex’s broader roadmap, but for regular users it is a meaningful one.
What’s new in the Codex Profile section
The Profile section inside Codex has been updated with two new capabilities: activity insights and shareable profile cards.
Activity insights give you a snapshot of how you have been using Codex over time. The data on display includes:
- Lifetime tokens consumed
- Peak tokens in a single session or period
- Streaks showing consecutive days of activity
- Your longest task on record
- Token activity over time, so you can see usage patterns at a glance
Alongside the stats, you can update your profile details, including your display name, username, and profile picture.
The shareable profile card pulls from these insights to produce a summary you can save as an image or share directly. Think of it as a Spotify Wrapped card, but for your coding and AI activity. OpenAI has scoped the sharing feature specifically to consumer ChatGPT plans, meaning Free, Go, Plus, and Pro subscribers can generate and share cards. Business and Enterprise users get the profile and activity tracking, but the share card is not part of their feature set for now.
Why this matters
Codex has grown fast. Since the desktop app launched in early 2025, weekly active users have passed five million, and usage has grown sixfold. Developers still make up the core user base, but knowledge workers now account for around 20% of Codex users and are growing three times faster than developers. That is a broad, varied audience, and features like profile cards help make the product feel personal rather than purely utilitarian.
Token-based tracking is also more meaningful now that Codex pricing moved to API token usage rather than per-message pricing (a change that took effect in April 2026 for Plus, Pro, Business, and new Enterprise plans). Seeing your lifetime token count or peak usage is not just vanity data; it reflects actual resource consumption and can help you understand where your allowance goes.
What this means for you
If you are a consumer Codex user (Free, Go, Plus, or Pro), you now have a clear view of how much you have used Codex and what your patterns look like. If you have been a regular user since launch, you may find the lifetime token count and streaks genuinely surprising. The share card gives you an easy way to post those stats, whether that is for fun on social media or to show a colleague what heavy Codex usage actually looks like.
If you are on a Business or Enterprise plan, profiles are rolling out gradually and you will get the activity tracking and usage stats. The shareable card is not available on those plans, but the underlying data is there, which is useful if you want to understand your own usage patterns or report back to a team.
If you are just getting started with Codex, the profile gives you a baseline from day one. You will be able to track how your usage evolves as you build more familiarity with the tool.
What else shipped in this release
The profile update did not arrive alone. The same release included a handful of improvements worth noting:
- Infrastructure updates improving responsiveness and in-app browser speed, stability, and web compatibility
- Improved Computer Use startup readiness and better appshot error reporting
- UI fixes covering fullscreen browser composer controls, hex colour swatches, terminal scrollbar alignment, and animated diff stat alignment
- Expanded onboarding with more role choices, so Codex can tailor first-run suggestions more accurately from the start
None of these are headline features, but they point to a product that is being refined across multiple layers at once. The onboarding expansion is worth highlighting in particular: Codex now collects more context about what you do and who you are before it starts making suggestions, which should make the first experience more relevant.
How to find your profile
Your Codex profile lives inside the Codex app settings under the Profile section. If you are already a Codex user, you should see the updated section appear there. The activity insights and card will populate based on your usage history, so the more you have used Codex, the more there is to see.
Codex is available across all ChatGPT plans. If you have not explored it yet, it is accessible from your existing ChatGPT account without needing a separate sign-up.