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The best code review tools to try in 2025

What are code review tools?

Code review tools help developers collaboratively examine code to identify bugs, improve quality, and ensure adherence to coding standards before merging changes into the main codebase. These tools facilitate peer reviews, highlight potential issues, and streamline feedback through comments, suggestions, and version tracking. By integrating with popular version control systems, they enable teams to manage reviews efficiently and maintain a high level of code quality across projects. The best code review tools enhance collaboration, ensure consistency, and reduce the likelihood of errors in production, ultimately contributing to a more reliable and maintainable codebase.

Merrill Lutsky
Merrill Lutsky
Building Graphite

Landscape of code review in 2025: Challenges and innovations

Rapid advancements in AI, the increasing scale of codebases, and the growing complexity of distributed teams have made code review simultaneously more challenging and more important than ever. As the landscape of eng productivity evolves, IC developers, engineering managers, and executives alike are rethinking what a good review process looks like and adopting tools that help them ship higher-quality code faster.

While code review may look different today than it did just five years ago, it hasn’t outgrown its original purposes: fostering collaboration, reducing technical debt, and maintaining code quality standards. Achieving these outcomes in practice is more difficult than ever before though; today’s teams face challenges like the volume of AI-generated code, the shift towards monorepos, coordination across distributed teams, and an ever-increasing emphasis on security.

What’s getting in the way: Challenges in modern code review

  1. Volume of AI-generated code

    AI code generation tools like GitHub Copilot and Cursor are helping developers write more code than ever. While going from idea to code has never been faster, each AI-generated code change still needs to be reviewed and tested properly before it can be shipped. AI coding tools not only generate more PRs to review but also produce code that, while technically correct, may lack optimization for performance or maintainability. For this reason, as well as maintaining human visibility of the codebase, it’s still critical for developers to be involved in the code review process.

  2. Shift to monorepos

    Monorepos offer huge advantages to fast-moving companies in terms of visibility, dependency management, and codebase consistency. However, the sheer size and complexity of monorepos at large companies can strain traditional code review tools, making it challenging to efficiently review changes and ensure the right reviewers are assigned.

  3. Scaling across distributed teams

    With globally distributed teams, engineers are often left waiting overnight for feedback on their pull requests. GitHub and GitLab were both built with asynchronous workflows in mind, but teams still struggle with balancing notifications, keeping reviews relevant to the right people, and getting authors feedback as quickly as possible across time zones, particularly as they try to ship quickly.

  4. Increasing emphasis on security

    Today, code review is about more than just catching bugs. As attackers become increasingly sophisticated, code review is becoming an even more critical line of defense against vulnerabilities, leaked secrets, exposed resources, and more. This means even more cognitive load on reviewers as they try to be conscious of an ever-expanding list of attack vectors.

To address these challenges, many fast-moving eng teams are looking to an exciting wave of new devtools emerging across the pull request lifecycle.

  1. AI-powered contextual suggestions

    To handle the ever-growing volume of AI-generated code, many teams are turning to AI-powered code review companions. Engineers no longer need to wait for a human reviewer to find minor issues in a PR—they spot them instantly, saving hours of back-and-forth review cycles and giving reviewers time back to focus on the bigger picture. AI code review tools like Graphite Reviewer and Ellipsis are great at catching issues like bugs, typos, and codebase style inconsistencies. Even established security scanning and static analysis tools like SonarQube and Snyk are quickly augmenting their offerings with AI comments and suggested remediations. As the base models improve in the coming years, we expect to see advanced AI review agents and self-healing CI quickly become industry-standard.

  2. Monorepo-specific tooling

    To unlock the benefits of monorepos, large enterprises are leveraging specialized tools and workflows. Modern code review tools like Reviewable, CodeApprove, and Graphite offer features designed to handle large-scale repositories, including powerful filtering and search capabilities. Reviewer assignment tools like GitHub's CODEOWNERS or Graphite Automations ensure that every change has the right eyes on it before release. Merge queues like Mergify and Graphite Merge Queue solve the nasty problem of merge conflicts as teams scale to hundreds or thousands of engineers landing changes concurrently. By adopting the right tools, teams can effectively manage code reviews in monorepos without getting bogged down by complexity.

  3. Small, incremental PRs and stacking

    Reviewing giant PRs with hundreds of lines is a known headache. Cisco research shows developers struggle to spot defects in reviews with over 400 lines of code. That's why many teams now prefer smaller, frequent pull requests—they're simpler to review, quicker to catch issues, and easier to merge and integrate. The stacked PRs workflow makes small code changes the norm by helping developers break up large changes into small, incremental pull requests. Creating and managing stacked PRs is easy with tools like ghstack, Git Tower, and the Graphite CLI and VS Code extension.

  4. Data-driven insights and review metrics

    Code review is finally becoming measurable. Software Engineering Insights (SEI) tools like Graphite Insights, DX, and Jellyfish show review patterns, approval rates, and PR open-to-merge times, which provides teams with a window into their review processes. Armed with this data, teams can identify specific stages where pull requests tend to stall or where reviews lag. By analyzing these trends, teams are better equipped to address and resolve bottlenecks, leading to faster and more effective review times.

What’s next for code review?

The way we build software has changed rapidly in the past five years, creating massive opportunities for new tools that make code review faster, more collaborative, and less stressful. Many of the world’s largest and fastest-moving engineering teams are already reaping major productivity benefits from this wave of new devtools, and it’s only going to get better from here. As LLMs continue to improve rapidly in the coming years, we’ll be able to automate away more and more of the tedium and frustration in the pull request lifecycle, giving developers time back to focus on creating great software.

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Digma is a Preemptive Observability product that uses standard observability data to identify performance and scaling issues at the code level during pre-production

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Axolo is the best way to collaborate on GitHub and GitLab pull & merge requests! 👀 Create a temporary Slack channel for each PR/MR 💻 Start code reviews faster, stop waiting on your reviewers ✌️ Handle reminders & stand-ups within Slack

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Bito
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Bito builds accessible, accurate AI tools trusted by developers across the world. Designed to help software engineers ship faster, better code, Bito offers a lineup of tools including: AI Code Review Agents, AI Chat in your IDE or CLI, AI Code Completions, and AI that understands your code.

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Maps are auto-generated, self-updating code diagrams. They sync your codebase as code evolves. With features to help you understand how files and folders are connected, see how code changes fit into the larger architecture, and more.

Sidekick Open Source
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Sidekick lets you collect stacks and dynamic logs from your applications without redeploying! Sidekick Open Source is here to make live debugging more accessible. Built for everyone who needs extra information from their running applications.

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Find, share and reuse code snippets.. By defining reusable code blocks you can import in your IDE, you not only improve your productivity but you also make sure you always import the correct code and are not missing anything.

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Qodo (formerly CodiumAI)
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Qodo is a multi-agent code integrity platform that enhances code quality with AI-powered tools across the software development process. Qodo’s agents for code testing, review, coverage, writing and more, enable developers to leverage AI to address complex, enterprise coding challenges. Qodo offers flexible deployment options, integrates seamlessly into developers' preferred IDEs and Git platforms, and supports all programming languages and testing frameworks.

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AI Code Reviewer
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AI reviews your code. If there is something wrong with your code, AI will let you know. If you have any questions, you can also ask the AI directly from the button in the lower right corner. Get the best code!

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Sourcegraph for VS Code is an extension that allows you to search an index of over 2 million open source repositories right from your IDE. You can quickly find example code and navigate all of the open source libraries you rely on without ever leaving VS Code.

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Refined Github
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We use GitHub a lot and notice many annoyances we'd like to fix. So here be dragons. Our hope is that GitHub will notice and implement some of these much needed improvements. So if you like any of these improvements, please email GitHub support about doing it. GitHub Enterprise is also supported. More info in the options.

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