VibeTools

Gemini Code Assist review: enterprise-only after June 2026

by VibeTools Editorialupdated June 20267 min read
Gemini Code Assist — AI code editor cover graphicGEAI CODE EDITORENTERPRISE $75/DEV/MO

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⚡ major change — June 18, 2026

Gemini Code Assist for individual developers has been discontinued. As of June 18, 2026, the individual, AI Pro ($19.99/mo), and AI Ultra ($249.99/mo) tiers stopped serving requests. Affected users were migrated to Google Antigravity. Gemini Code Assist continues as an enterprise product at $75/developer/month. Source: Google Cloud documentation.

key takeaways

  • Individual tier discontinued June 18, 2026 — individual users moved to Antigravity.
  • Enterprise plan continues at $75/developer/month with full GCP integration.
  • 1M token context window — strongest individual feature, reads entire large codebases.
  • Plugins for VS Code, JetBrains, Cloud Workstations — no editor switch required.
  • For solo devs looking for a Copilot alternative: use GitHub Copilot, Cursor, or Antigravity instead.

What Gemini Code Assist was for individual developers

Before June 2026, Gemini Code Assist was Google's direct competitor to GitHub Copilot: an IDE plugin that added AI code completions, inline suggestions, and a chat panel inside VS Code or JetBrains without requiring a new editor. Its distinguishing feature was the 1M token context window from Gemini 2.5 — significantly larger than Copilot's effective context. Individual plan was free with daily rate limits.

The 1M context was the most important difference in practice. Where Copilot reads your open tabs, Gemini Code Assist could theoretically read your entire repository in one context window — enabling accurate answers about cross-file dependencies and full-project refactoring suggestions without you specifying which files to include.

What Gemini Code Assist is now: enterprise-only

As of June 18, 2026, Gemini Code Assist exists only as an enterprise product at $75/developer/month ($63/month with annual billing). This positions it against GitHub Copilot Enterprise ($39/user/mo) and Cursor Business ($40/user/mo) — but at a higher price with a justification built around GCP integration, admin controls, and managed environments for Google Cloud teams.

The enterprise plan includes: full GCP integration (Vertex AI, BigQuery, Cloud Workstations), admin controls and audit logging, managed code customization on your private codebase, and SSO with Google Workspace. For a team already deep in Google Cloud, this is a coherent offering. For a team not using GCP, the $75/dev price is hard to justify against Cursor Business at $40/dev.

Enterprise comparison: who it's for

Gemini Code AssistCopilot EnterpriseCursor Business
Price$75/dev/mo$39/user/mo$40/user/mo
Context1M tokens (Gemini 2.5)Larger than individualManual @-mentions
IDEVS Code + JetBrainsVS Code + JetBrainsVS Code only
CloudDeep GCP integrationGitHub/AzureNone
Best forGCP-native teamsGitHub-heavy teamsTeams who want Composer

Who should use it — and who shouldn't

use Gemini Code Assist if…

  • Your team is already deep in Google Cloud / GCP
  • You need managed admin controls and audit logs
  • You use Cloud Workstations as a dev environment
  • Enterprise compliance requires Google's data boundary

use something else if…

  • You're a solo developer — tier no longer exists
  • You're not on Google Cloud — no justification for $75
  • You want agent work (Composer, Cascade) — this is plugin-only
  • Budget matters — Copilot Enterprise is $36/dev cheaper

FAQ

Is Gemini Code Assist still available for individual developers?

No. As of June 18, 2026, Google discontinued the Gemini Code Assist individual, AI Pro, and AI Ultra tiers. Affected users were migrated to Google Antigravity. Gemini Code Assist continues as an enterprise product at $75/developer/month. Source: Google Cloud documentation, June 2026.

What is the difference between Gemini Code Assist and Google Antigravity?

Gemini Code Assist was an IDE plugin for inline completions and chat — comparable to GitHub Copilot. Google Antigravity is an agent-first platform (IDE + desktop app + CLI + SDK) for orchestrating autonomous agents. Google has consolidated individual developer tooling into Antigravity and positioned Gemini Code Assist as the enterprise/GCP-integrated option.

How much does Gemini Code Assist cost in 2026?

As of June 2026, Gemini Code Assist is enterprise-only at $75/developer/month ($63/month with annual billing). The individual ($0), AI Pro ($19.99/mo), and AI Ultra ($249.99/mo) tiers were discontinued on June 18, 2026. Enterprise includes full GCP integration, admin controls, and managed environments.

What context window does Gemini Code Assist have?

Gemini Code Assist uses Gemini 2.5, which supports a 1 million token context window — the same size as Claude Code. In practice this means it can read entire large codebases in a single context without chunking or summarizing. This is its strongest technical differentiator versus GitHub Copilot, which has a much smaller effective context.

Which IDEs does Gemini Code Assist support?

Gemini Code Assist works as a plugin in VS Code, IntelliJ IDEA, PyCharm, GoLand, WebStorm, and other JetBrains IDEs. It also supports Cloud Workstations and Cloud Shell Editor. Languages include Java, JavaScript, TypeScript, Python, C/C++, Go, PHP, SQL, and more.

Should I use Gemini Code Assist or Antigravity?

If you are a solo developer or small team: Antigravity (Google's individual-tier product post-June 2026). If you are an enterprise team on Google Cloud with compliance requirements and admin controls: Gemini Code Assist Enterprise. The two products now serve distinct segments — Google effectively bifurcated the audience on June 18, 2026.

Individual alternative: Google Antigravity (where individual users were migrated). Budget alternative: GitHub Copilot ($10/mo). Agent alternative: Cursor ($20/mo, Composer). See all in best AI code editors.