OpenAI has found a new way to monetize its AI video generator, Sora. The company announced that users who hit their daily limit of free generations can now pay extra to keep producing more videos—because apparently 30 free clips a day just isn’t enough for some.
Bill Peebles, OpenAI’s head of Sora, shared the update on X, calling the current economics of the free tier “completely unsustainable.” Under the new system, users can buy an additional 10 video generations for $4. Peebles also hinted that the number of free generations could be reduced in the future, so heavy users might want to start budgeting for their AI filmmaking habit.
Right now, Sora allows up to 30 free video generations per day, which has been plenty for most casual users experimenting with short clips or creative concepts. But the platform’s growing popularity—and the massive compute costs that come with AI video generation—have clearly forced OpenAI to start turning the free experience into a paid one.
The move signals an early step in how OpenAI might commercialize Sora beyond its initial buzz as a futuristic creative toy. Peebles also floated a more speculative idea: letting companies charge for the use of branded or popular characters in Sora-generated videos. In theory, that could create a kind of “AI cameo economy,” though it’s unclear how licensing and copyright would even begin to work in that scenario.
The decision reflects a familiar pattern in the AI industry—start with open access, build hype, then introduce monetization once demand and costs stabilize. Users who have been using Sora for free since launch might soon find themselves paying to keep up the same level of output, especially if OpenAI tightens the daily free quota.
Still, for creators using Sora as a low-cost video production tool, a few dollars for extra clips might feel like a reasonable trade-off. For everyone else, it’s a reminder that the AI revolution, like streaming and social media before it, always comes with a subscription plan attached.

