Opera Neon AI-Powered Browser Is Now Public But It Costs $19.90 a Month

Quick Reads
- What is Opera Neon? It is Opera’s new AI-first browser, now publicly available at $19.90 per month.
- What can it do? It runs AI agents, builds mini apps, manages tabs intelligently, and executes research tasks.
- Who gets premium AI models? Subscribers unlock Gemini 3 Pro, GPT-5.1, Veo 3.1, and Nano Banana Pro.
- What about free Opera users? Opera One, GX, and Air still offer free AI chat features.
- Who are Opera Neon’s rivals? Perplexity’s Comet, OpenAI’s Atlas, and The Browser Company’s Dia are all competing in the same lane.
Opera has officially launched the Opera Neon AI-powered browser to the public after months of limited testing. However, the privilege comes at a price, $19.90 every month. The Norway-based company first teased Neon back in May 2025. Subsequently, it opened early access to a select group of users in October of the same year.
Now, the browser is available to anyone willing to pay. The Opera Neon AI-powered browser bakes in an AI chatbot directly into its interface. Users can ask it questions, create mini apps and videos, and get it to complete tasks on their behalf. Furthermore, the browser uses your browsing history as context. Therefore, you can ask it to retrieve details from a YouTube video you watched last week.
Opera Neon also supports a feature called Cards. Cards lets users build repeatable task prompts quickly. In addition, the browser includes a deep research agent. This agent fetches detailed information on any topic you throw at it. Moreover, a tab management feature called Tasks organizes your AI chats and browser tabs into focused workspaces.
The subscription does not stop at features. Subscribers also gain access to powerful AI models, including Gemini 3 Pro, GPT-5.1, Veo 3.1, and Nano Banana Pro. On top of that, paying users get direct access to Opera’s developers and its Discord community. This sets Opera Neon apart from most browser products on the market today.
Krystian Kolondra, EVP of Browsers at Opera, described Neon as a product built for early adopters and AI enthusiasts. He noted that the team has been refining the browser with its Founders community for a while. Consequently, the public launch reflects that collaborative development process.
Meanwhile, Opera reassured users of its other products. Opera One, Opera GX, and Opera Air still carry free AI features, including a chat-based assistant. So, existing Opera users are not left behind. The paid tier is simply for those who want the most cutting-edge experience.
The AI browser space is, notably, getting very crowded. Competitors like Perplexity’s Comet and OpenAI’s Atlas are all chasing the same goal. Meanwhile, traditional browser giants are moving more cautiously. For instance, Google is actively working on security measures for its agentic Chrome features. Similarly, Brave is previewing its AI tools in a nightly developer build. Unlike those companies, Opera is going full throttle with Opera Neon as a premium, subscription-first AI product.
The big question now is whether users will pay for a browser. Historically, browsers have always been free. Nevertheless, Opera is betting that serious AI power users will see the value in $19.90 a month.






