- Google’s last coding agent, Jules, is now generally available for all
- Jules offers a free level and two payments with higher limits
- Gemini 2.5 Pro produces high quality code outputs
Google has announced the general availability of its latest AI coding agent, Jules.
Initially revealed in December 2024 as a Google Labs project, Jules has now been launched as an offer of customers who pay, but limited free access is also confirmed.
In a blog post that announces the launch, Google declared that its decision to use Gemini 2.5 Pro would lead to “higher quality code outputs.”
Google makes Jules generally available
Designed for asynchronous operation, Jules can work in the background without user supervision, so it is a considerable improvement on the examples of previous generative generatives of coding assistants. Admitting multimodal entries and outputs, Jules promises to write, prove and improve the code while simultaneously visualizing the results for its users.
Google expects its new AI agent not only to be a valuable tool for developers, but also designers of websites and business workers who do not have enough coding experience.
During the beta phase, users already used Jules to send hundreds of thousands of tasks, with more than 140,000 improvements in the publicly shared code.
Now that Google’s confident Jules works, the general availability lands with a new optimized user interface, new capacities based on user comments and error corrections.
Although the free plan obtains the same support as Gemini 2.5 Pro as the higher level options, it is limited to 15 daily tasks and three concurrent tasks.
PRO ($ 124.99/month) add support for up to 100 daily tasks and 15 concurrent tasks, as well as “greater access to the latest models, starting with Gemini 2.5 Pro, suggesting that it is likely to obtain improvements from the model before the free level.
Ultra ($ 199.99/month) obtains priority access to these latest models, plus 300 daily tasks and 60 concurrent tasks.