Google Slashes AI Video Costs with Veo 3.1 Lite Launch
Luisa Crawford
Mar 31, 2026 16:52
Google launches Veo 3.1 Lite at 50% lower cost than Fast tier, with additional price cuts coming April 7. Available now via Gemini API.
Google just dropped Veo 3.1 Lite, positioning it as the budget-friendly option for developers building video-heavy applications. The new model runs at less than half the cost of Veo 3.1 Fast while matching its generation speed—a meaningful shift for anyone running high-volume video workloads.
The timing matters. With OpenAI’s Sora facing ongoing availability questions, alternatives like Veo, Runway, and Kling have been jockeying for developer attention. Google’s aggressive pricing move could lock in market share during this window.
What Veo 3.1 Lite Actually Offers
The model supports both Text-to-Video and Image-to-Video generation with flexible output options. Developers get landscape (16:9) and portrait (9:16) ratios at either 720p or 1080p resolution. Duration is customizable at 4, 6, or 8 seconds, with pricing scaling accordingly.
For context, the standard Veo 3.1 remains the quality king—better for final deliverables where visual fidelity matters most. The Lite version trades some of that polish for roughly 2x faster generation and significantly lower API costs. Think rapid prototyping, batch production, or any use case where you’re iterating quickly rather than shipping final cuts.
More Price Cuts Incoming
Google isn’t stopping here. On April 7, Veo 3.1 Fast pricing drops as well, though the company hasn’t disclosed specific numbers yet. The move suggests Google wants to undercut competitors across the entire quality-cost spectrum.
The model family now offers three distinct tiers: standard Veo 3.1 for maximum quality, Veo 3.1 Fast for balanced performance, and the new Lite option for cost-sensitive volume applications. Developers can mix and match based on specific use cases within the same project.
Access and Availability
Veo 3.1 Lite is rolling out now through the Gemini API’s paid tier and Google AI Studio for testing. The paid preview model means developers can start building immediately, though expect some capacity constraints during the initial rollout period.
For developers already using earlier Veo versions, the upgrade path is straightforward—same API structure, just point to the new model endpoint. Those coming from competing platforms will find standard Text-to-Video and Image-to-Video interfaces that should feel familiar.
Google’s blog post hints at additional updates coming soon, suggesting the video generation pricing war is just getting started.
Image source: Shutterstock
