Google Revises Gemini Quotas After AI Pro Subscriber Complaints


TL;DR

  • Quota Revision: Google isrevising Gemini’s paid limits after complaints that one failed video task could consume a full five-hour window.
  • Policy Change: Google now caps how much one Gemini 3.1 Pro request can use, and failed jobs no longer count against quota.
  • Subscriber Test: AI Pro buyers still need the refreshed quota system to feel predictable when heavier Omni and video features are part of normal use.

Google is revising Gemini’s compute-based usage limits after complaints that expensive tasks could burn through quota too quickly.

One failed avatar-video request reported by a user on X exhausted his entire five-hour usage window, turning a subscription update into a direct product problem for Google AI Pro subscribers. Google Gemini lead Josh Woodward offered a public response, stating “Yikes, let us take a look!”

 

Paying users had already seen Google push Gemini toward compute-based quotas through the wider subscription reset in May. The earlier Gemini 3.1 Pro rollout had also expanded the premium stack, leaving Google’s paid plans under pressure to make heavier workloads feel predictable enough for subscribers who use video and other costly tools.

How Gemini’s New Quota Rules Changed

Quota now depends on how demanding a task is, not just how many prompts a user sends. Google’s paid setup reflects prompt complexity and tool usage, with limits that refresh every five hours until a weekly cap is reached.

Under that model, Google is also limiting how much quota a single Gemini 3.1 Pro prompt can consume.