Google on Wednesday put his AI coding agent, Jules out of beta, two months after the introduction of its public preview in May on Wednesday.
Powered by Gemini 2.5 Pro, Jules is an asynchronous, agent-based coding tool that integrates with github, cloud clouds cloud virtual machines clones the codebase, and use AI to fix or update the code while the developers focus on other functions.
Google Initially declared Jules as a Google Labs Project in December and made it available to beta examiners through a public preview at its I/O Developer Conference.
Kathy Korevek, director of the product at Google Labs, told Techcrunch that the better stability of the tool decided to get it out of the beta after receiving hundreds of UI and quality updates during its beta phase.
He said, “Where we are leaving, his projection gives us a lot of confidence that it is around Jules and living around for a long race,” he said.
With a comprehensive rollout, Google introduced structured pricing levels for Jules, which began with 15 individual daily tasks below the 60-function limit during beta and “introductory access” on three concurrent people. Jules’s paid tier is part of the Google AI Pro and Ultra Plan, priced at $ 19.99 and $ 124.99 per month, and offers subscribers 5 × and 20 × high boundaries respectively.
Koreveak stated that the packaging and pricing of Jules are based on “real use” insight over the last few months.
“The 60-task cap helped us to study how the developers used Jules and gave us the necessary information to design the new packaging,” she said. “15/day is designed to explain to people whether Jules will work for them on real project tasks.”
Google also made more clear to Jules’ privacy policy of how it trains AI. If a repository is public, its data can be used for training, but if it is private, Korevek said no data is sent.
“We received a little response from users that this (privacy policy) was not as clear as we thought it was, and so most of it is just responding to this. Nothing changed about what we are doing on the training side, but we changed the language,” Korev said.
During Beta, Google said that thousands of developers dealt with tens of thousands of tasks, resulting in more than 140,000 code reforms publicly shared. The initial response inspired the Google Labs team to add new abilities, including reusing the previous setup for rapid functioning, integrating with Github issues and supporting multimodal inputs.

Two primary users of Jules are still AI enthusiastic and professional developers, Koreveak said.
Top AI coding tools such as Jules Cursor, Windsurf and Pyara are distinguished from the AI coding tools, which all work and after each prompt, users need to see output by running Jules Cursor, Windsurf and Pyara.
“Jules operate like an additional set of hands … you can basically close tasks for it, and then you can close your computer and if you want, you can walk away from it and then come back after hours. Jules will be done for you, vs you.
This week, Jules found a deep integration with Github Automatically open bridge request – Like it can open branches – and a feature called Environmental snapshot To save dependence and install the script as a snapshot for more consistent function execution.
From vibe coding to mobile use, beta tests informed the development of jules
Since entering public beta, Jules have traveled 2.28 million worldwide, 45% of them from mobile devices, data towards market intelligence provider SimilarReviewed by Techcrunch. India was the top market for traffic, followed by America and Vietnam.
Google did not share the nuances on the user base of Jules and its top geography.
Koreveak told Techcrunch that during beta, the team noticed that many people used jules from traditional vib-coding tools, either the bug could be cured, which could have been implemented or expanded the vib-coded project to make it more production.
Originally, jules require users the current codebase. But Google soon realized many potential users – such as other AI tools – want to detect it without one. Koreveak said the company quickly enabled Jules to work with an empty repository. This helped to increase its scope and use.
The team of Google Labs also saw the increasing number of users reaching the jules through their mobile devices. Although there is not a dedicated mobile app in the tool, Korevek stated that users were accessing it through their web apps.
“Since this is a big use case we are seeing emerging, we are fully searching for what facilities people need too much on mobile,” he said.
Along with beta testers, Korevek stated that Google already uses jules to help develop some projects internal, and now is a “big push” to use the tool on “too much projects” in the company.