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Veo 3.1

Per Request:$0.4
Veo 3.1 is Google’s incremental-but-significant update to its Veo text-and-image→video family, adding richer native audio, longer and more controllable video outputs, and finer editing and scene-level controls.
New
Commercial Use
Playground
Overview
Features
Pricing
API
Versions

Core features

Veo 3.1 focuses on practical content creation features:

  • Native audio generation (dialogue, ambient sound, SFX) integrated in outputs. Veo 3.1 generates native audio (dialogue + ambience + SFX) aligned to the visual timeline; the model aims to preserve lip sync and audio–visual alignment for dialogue and scene cues.
  • Longer outputs (support for up to ~60 seconds / 1080p versus Veo 3’s very short clips,8s), and multi-prompt multi-shot sequences for narrative continuity.
  • Scene Extension and First/Last Frame modes that extend or interpolate footage between key frames.
  • Object insertion and (coming) object removal and editing primitives inside Flow.

Each bullet above is designed to reduce manual VFX work: audio and scene continuity are now first-class outputs rather than afterthoughts.

Technical details (model behavior & inputs)

Model family & variants: Veo belongs to Google’s Veo-3 family; the preview model ID is typically veo3.1-pro; veo3.1 (CometAPI doc). It accepts text prompts, image references (single frame or sequences), and structured multi-prompt layouts for multi-shot generation.

Resolution & duration: Preview documentation describes outputs at 720p/1080p with options for longer durations (up to ~60s in certain preview settings) and higher fidelity than earlier Veo variants.

Aspect ratios: 16:9 (supported) and 9:16 (supported except in some reference-image flows).

Prompt language: English (preview).

API limits: typical preview limits include max 10 API requests/min per project, max 4 videos per request, and video lengths selectable among 4, 6, or 8 seconds (reference-image flows support 8s).

Benchmark performance

Google’s internal and publicly summarized evaluations report strong preference for Veo 3.1 outputs across human rater comparisons on metrics such as text alignment, visual quality, and audio–visual coherence (text→video and image→video tasks).

Veo 3.1 achieved state-of-the-art results on internal human-rater comparisons across several objective axes — overall preference, prompt alignment (text→video and image→video), visual quality, audio-video alignment, and “visually realistic physics” on benchmark datasets such as MovieGenBench and VBench.

Limitations & safety considerations

Limitations:

  • Artifacts & inconsistency: despite improvements, certain lighting, fine-grained physics, and complex occlusions can still yield artifacts; image→video consistency (especially over long durations) is improved but not perfect.
  • Misinformation / deepfake risk: richer audio + object insertion/removal increases misuse risk (realistic fake audio and extended clips). Google notes mitigations (policy, safeguards) and earlier Veo launches referenced watermarking/SynthID to aid provenance; however technical safeguards do not eliminate misuse risk.
  • Cost & throughput constraints: high-resolution, long videos are computationally expensive and currently gated in a paid preview—expect higher latency and cost compared with image models. Community posts and Google forum threads discuss availability windows and fallback strategies.

Safety controls: Veo3.1 has integrated content policies, watermarking/synthID signaling in earlier Veo releases, and preview access controls; customers are advised to follow platform policy and implement human review for high-risk outputs.

Practical use cases

  • Rapid prototyping for creatives: storyboards → multi-shot clips and animatics with native dialogue for early creative review.
  • Marketing & short form content: 15–60s product spots, social clips, and concept teasers where speed matters more than perfect photorealism.
  • Image→video adaptation: turning illustrations, characters, or two frames into smooth transitions or animated scenes via First/Last Frame and Scene Extension.
  • Tooling augmentation: integrated into Flow for iterative editing (object insertion/removal, lighting presets) that reduces manual VFX passes.

Comparison with other leading models

Veo 3.1 vs Veo 3 (predecessor): Veo 3.1 focuses on improved prompt adherence, audio quality, and multi-shot consistency — incremental but impactful updates aimed at reducing artifacts and improving editability.

Veo 3.1 vs OpenAI Sora 2: tradeoffs reported in press: Veo 3.1 emphasizes longer-form narrative control, integrated audio, and Flow editing integration; Sora 2 (when compared in press) focuses on different strengths (speed, different editing pipelines). TechRadar and other outlets frame Veo 3.1 as Google’s targeted competitor to Sora 2 for narrative and longer video support. Independent side-by-side testing remains limited.

Features for Veo 3.1

Explore the key features of Veo 3.1, designed to enhance performance and usability. Discover how these capabilities can benefit your projects and improve user experience.

Pricing for Veo 3.1

Explore competitive pricing for Veo 3.1, designed to fit various budgets and usage needs. Our flexible plans ensure you only pay for what you use, making it easy to scale as your requirements grow. Discover how Veo 3.1 can enhance your projects while keeping costs manageable.
Comet Price (USD / M Tokens)Official Price (USD / M Tokens)Discount
Per Request:$0.4
Per Request:$0.5
-20%

Sample code and API for Veo 3.1

Access comprehensive sample code and API resources for Veo 3.1 to streamline your integration process. Our detailed documentation provides step-by-step guidance, helping you leverage the full potential of Veo 3.1 in your projects.
Python
JavaScript
Curl
import os
import time
import requests

# Get your CometAPI key from https://api.cometapi.com/console/token, and paste it here
COMETAPI_KEY = os.environ.get("COMETAPI_KEY") or "<YOUR_COMETAPI_KEY>"
BASE_URL = "https://api.cometapi.com/veo/v1/video"

# Create video generation task
create_response = requests.post(
    f"{BASE_URL}/create",
    headers={
        "Authorization": COMETAPI_KEY,
        "Content-Type": "application/json",
    },
    json={
        "prompt": "An orange cat flying in the blue sky with white clouds, sunlight pouring onto its fur, creating a beautiful and dreamlike scene",
        "model": "veo3.1",
        "enhance_prompt": True,
    },
)

task = create_response.json()
task_id = task["id"]
print(f"Task created: {task_id}")
print(f"Status: {task['status']}")

# Poll until video is ready
while True:
    query_response = requests.get(
        f"{BASE_URL}/query/{task_id}",
        headers={
            "Authorization": f"Bearer {COMETAPI_KEY}",
        },
    )

    result = query_response.json()
    status = result["data"]["status"]
    progress = result["data"].get("progress", "")

    print(f"Checking status... {status} {progress}")

    if status == "SUCCESS" or result["data"]["data"]["status"] == "completed":
        video_url = result["data"]["data"]["video_url"]
        print(f"
Video URL: {video_url}")
        break
    elif status == "FAILED":
        print(f"Failed: {result['data'].get('fail_reason', 'Unknown error')}")
        break

    time.sleep(10)

Versions of Veo 3.1

The reason Veo 3.1 has multiple snapshots may include potential factors such as variations in output after updates requiring older snapshots for consistency, providing developers a transition period for adaptation and migration, and different snapshots corresponding to global or regional endpoints to optimize user experience. For detailed differences between versions, please refer to the official documentation.
version
veo3.1
veo3.1-pro

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