- Jules, Google's latest AI coding agent, is now generally available to everyone
- Joule offers a free tier and two paid options with higher limits
- Gemini 2.5 Pro generates high quality code output
Google has announced the general availability of Jules, the latest AI coding agent.
Originally revealed in December 2024 as a Google Labs project, Jules has now launched as a customer payment service, but has also been confirmed to have limited free access.
In a blog post announcing its launch, Google stated its decision that the decision to use the Gemini 2.5 Pro would lead to “high-quality code output.”
Google makes Joules generally available
Designed for asynchronous operations, Joules can work in the background without user oversight, providing a significant improvement over previous generation AI examples of coding assistants. Supporting multimodal input and output, Joule promises to write, test and improve your code while simultaneously visualizing user results.
Google hopes that the new AI agent will not only be a valuable tool for developers, but also for website designers and enterprise workers who do not have sufficient coding experience.
In the beta stage, users have already submitted hundreds of thousands of tasks using Joules, with over 140,000 code improvements published.
Now that Google's confident Joule has worked, general availability features a new streamlined user interface, new features based on user feedback and bug fixes.
The free plan gets the same Gemini 2.5 Pro back as the high-rise options, but is limited to 15 tasks and 3 concurrent tasks.
PRO ($124.99/month) adds support for up to 100 daily tasks and 15 parallel tasks, suggesting that there is a high access to the latest models starting with Gemini 2.5 Pro, and that model improvements are likely to be obtained before the free tier.
Ultra ($199.99/month) offers priority access to 300 tasks and 60 concurrent tasks daily, in addition to these latest models.
