When a company that makes most of its money from ads starts giving away developer tools for free, you should ask questions. Google announced in March 2026 that Gemini Code Assist is now free for individual developers. No credit card. No trial period. Just sign in with your Google account and start coding.
I've been using it for two weeks. Here's what's actually going on.
What You Get For Free
The free tier includes code completion, chat-based assistance, and multi-file editing directly in VS Code and JetBrains IDEs. You get Gemini 2.5 Pro under the hood, which is Google's best reasoning model. The context window is large — Google claims full-repository understanding through their indexing system.
Setup is dead simple:
# VS Code
code --install-extension google.gemini-code-assist
# JetBrains (from marketplace)
# Search "Gemini Code Assist" in Plugins
After installation, you authenticate with Google and you're running. No API keys, no workspace configuration, no billing setup. It just works.
The free tier gives you what Google calls "generous daily limits" without specifying exact numbers. In my testing, I hit a rate limit exactly once during a particularly intense refactoring session — maybe 200+ completions in an hour. It reset within 30 minutes. For normal development, you won't notice the ceiling.
How It Compares to Copilot
GitHub Copilot costs $10/month for individuals. It's been the default for most developers since 2022. So the obvious question: is Gemini Code Assist good enough to cancel your Copilot subscription?
In short — it depends on your language. For Python, TypeScript, and Go, Gemini Code Assist is now roughly on par with Copilot. The completions are fast, contextually aware, and rarely wrong in ways that waste your time.
Where Gemini genuinely beats Copilot is multi-file awareness. When I'm refactoring a TypeScript project, Gemini understands how changes in one file affect imports, types, and tests across the codebase. Copilot is getting better at this but still feels more file-local in its suggestions.
// When you rename a type in types.ts, Gemini automatically suggests
// updates in files that import it
// types.ts - you change this:
export interface UserProfile {
id: string;
displayName: string; // was: name
email: string;
avatarUrl: string; // was: avatar
}
// Gemini immediately suggests fixes in user-service.ts:
// Before: const name = profile.name;
// After: const name = profile.displayName;
// And in UserCard.tsx:
// Before: <img src={user.avatar} />
// After: <img src={user.avatarUrl} />
Where Copilot still wins: niche languages and frameworks. If you're writing Rust, Elixir, or working with less popular libraries, Copilot's training data advantage shows. Gemini's suggestions get noticeably vaguer outside the mainstream.
How It Compares to Claude Code
Different category entirely. Claude Code is a terminal-based autonomous agent. You describe what you want, and it writes entire features, runs tests, and iterates. It costs money per token and targets developers who want AI to do more of the heavy lifting.
Gemini Code Assist is an IDE co-pilot. It helps you write code faster while you stay in the driver's seat. These aren't really competing products — they serve different workflows.
That said, Gemini Code Assist's chat mode is trying to bridge the gap. You can highlight code, ask it to refactor, and it'll propose multi-file changes. It's decent for small-to-medium refactors but can't match a dedicated agent for anything complex.
What's the Actual Catch?
Here's where I get opinionated. There are three catches, and none of them are hidden — they're just not in the marketing.
Catch 1: Your code goes to Google. The privacy policy is clear. Code snippets are sent to Google's servers for processing. For the free tier, Google reserves the right to use your interactions to improve their models. If you're working on proprietary code at a company with strict IP policies, this is a non-starter. The paid Enterprise tier ($19/user/month) has a no-training-data clause.
Catch 2: Google kills products. I don't need to list the graveyard. Google has a well-documented history of launching, underinvesting in, and then shutting down developer tools. If you build your workflow around Gemini Code Assist and it gets discontinued in 18 months, that's a real cost. Copilot has Microsoft's commitment to monetize it through GitHub. Google's incentive is less clear.
Catch 3: The ecosystem lock-in is real. Gemini Code Assist works best when you're also using Google Cloud, Firebase, and Google's other services. The suggestions subtly favor Google's ecosystem. Ask it to set up a database and it'll suggest Firestore before PostgreSQL. Ask about deployment and Cloud Run appears before anything else.
# Ask Gemini to help with caching and you'll get:
from google.cloud import memorystore
client = memorystore.CloudMemorystoreClient()
# ... Google Cloud Memorystore setup
# Ask Copilot the same question:
import redis
client = redis.Redis(host='localhost', port=6379, db=0)
# ... standard Redis setup
It's not that the Google suggestions are wrong. They're fine. But the nudge toward Google's cloud is consistent and worth being aware of.
My Recommendation
If you're a solo developer or student who doesn't want to pay $10/month for Copilot, Gemini Code Assist is a genuinely good free alternative. The quality gap has closed significantly, and for mainstream languages you won't feel like you're using a second-tier product.
If you're at a company, the calculation is different. The privacy implications and the risk of Google sunsetting the product make Copilot Business or Copilot Enterprise a safer bet. You're paying for stability and IP protection as much as for the AI itself.
If you're already deep in the Google Cloud ecosystem, this is a no-brainer. The integration is smooth and the cloud-specific suggestions are actually helpful rather than annoying.
And if you're using Claude Code or Cursor for agentic workflows, Gemini Code Assist isn't a replacement — it's a complement. Use the agent for big changes, use the co-pilot for line-by-line flow.
The AI coding tools market is getting crowded and competitive. Free is a strong price. Just remember that when you're not paying for the product, your data is part of the deal.