Google is lighting up its Flow creative stack with Nano Banana Pro, a new top-tier image model now live for Ultra subscribers. Positioned as the new default for high-control visual work, Nano Banana Pro focuses on sharp multilingual text rendering, precise object-level editing, and support for up to ten reference images for styles, scenes, and recurring characters. This mix targets storyboarding, localized campaigns, thumbnails, and product reels where brands need the same character or layout to survive multiple rounds of edits without drifting.
We prompted the camera to shift focus from background to foreground. Notice how it feels optical, not just like a soft filter. Nano Banana Pro understands depth, giving a cinematic look and feel. pic.twitter.com/43MKCxgNwO
— FlowbyGoogle (@FlowbyGoogle) November 20, 2025
Inside Flow, Ultra users can pick Nano Banana Pro from the model dropdown for both fresh generations and edit workflows, with Google warning that heavy demand may occasionally route jobs back to the standard Nano Banana model once daily limits are hit. Access is set to expand to other paid tiers after the initial Ultra rollout, turning today into a shakedown period for capacity planning and quality tuning across diverse use cases.
At the same time, Google confirms that Flow’s video side is under heavy strain as Veo 3 usage spikes. Fast Veo 3 generations move from zero credits to a 10 credit price point, while high-quality Veo 3 runs stay at 100 credits. To keep power users online during this crunch, Google is granting a one-time 2,500 credit top-up to AI Ultra accounts, promised by November 28, and advising creators to expect occasional retries while load balancing catches up with demand.