What this error means
Sorry, you've exceeded your 5 hour session limits. Please review our Terms of Service. Code: user_weekly_rate_limited:pro_plus is a GitHub Copilot failure pattern reported for developers trying to fix persistent copilot pro+ weekly rate limit that does not reset, blocking paid subscribers from using any model. Based on the imported evidence, treat this as a tool-specific troubleshooting page rather than a generic API error.
Why this happens
Multiple Copilot CLI issues (#2741, #2769, #2742) report Pro+ users hitting user_weekly_rate_limited:pro_plus that persists beyond expected reset windows; some blocked for 463+ hours. One account with active token allocation still gets global 429. High commercial value: affects paying customers. Mapped to GitHub Copilot per approved category list.
Common causes
- Multiple Copilot CLI issues (#2741, #2769, #2742) report Pro+ users hitting user_weekly_rate_limited:pro_plus that persists beyond expected reset windows; some blocked for 463+ hours. One account with active token allocation still gets global 429. High commercial value: affects paying customers. Mapped to GitHub Copilot per approved category list.
Quick fixes
- Confirm the exact error signature matches
Sorry, you've exceeded your 5 hour session limits. Please review our Terms of Service. Code: user_weekly_rate_limited:pro_plus. - Check the GitHub Copilot account, local tool state, and provider configuration involved in the failing workflow.
- Reduce request pressure, check quota or plan limits, and retry with backoff instead of immediate repeated requests.
Platform/tool-specific checks
- Verify the command, editor, extension, or API client that produced the error.
- Compare local settings with CI, deployment, or editor-level settings when the error appears in only one environment.
- Avoid deleting credentials, local model data, or project settings until the failing scope is clear.
Step-by-step troubleshooting
- Capture the exact error message and the command, editor action, or request that triggered it.
- Check whether the failure is account/auth, quota/rate, model/provider, local runtime, or deployment configuration.
- Review the source evidence below and compare it with your environment.
- Apply one change at a time and rerun the smallest failing action.
- Keep the working fix documented for the team or deployment environment.
How to prevent it
- Keep provider/tool configuration documented.
- Record non-secret diagnostics such as tool version, provider name, model name, and command path.
- Add a lightweight check before CI or production workflows depend on the tool.