TL;DR
- Rebrand Shift: Mistral has renamed Le Chat as Vibe and is pitching it as one unified agent for office workflows and remote coding.
- Work Tools: Work Mode connects business apps, lets users review task plans, and routes outputs across shared workplace systems.
- Code Lane: Code Mode runs remote sessions in cloud sandboxes, with Slack-started jobs slated for June 2026.
- Pricing Split: Pro starts at 14.99 per month, while Team’s 24.99 tier appears to add admin features more than higher usage limits.
Mistral has renamed its Le Chat AI assistant into Vibe and unified its offering into an AI agent. Existing accounts kept prior conversations, settings, and plans under the new brand.
The rebranded assistant now has to cover office workflows and remote coding, which turns the rename into a product-packaging test rather than a simple brand swap. Mistral is now competing as a broader work-and-code product rather than as a standalone chatbot.
Mistral’s packaging choice is the real test. The Vibe interface now covers office workflows, remote coding, and the handoff between them without making either lane feel like an add-on.
Mistral Merges Office Tasks and Coding Work
Work Mode can use Google Workspace and GitHub connectors alongside Outlook, SharePoint, Slack, and custom connectors to complete multi-step tasks across business apps. Office teams are the obvious audience for that connected-app lane.
Users can review a task plan before execution, inspect each step, schedule recurring jobs, and turn repeatable routines into saved skills. Approval is the control point between company data and the action that follows.
Office work is part of the immediate product pitch, not a background extra. Work Mode can scan inboxes, pull spreadsheet data, build reports, and route outputs to Notion or SharePoint, which makes the feature set easier to picture for non-developers. Instead of asking users to trust a black box, Vibe is being sold as a visible task runner with a defined plan.
Code Mode runs remote coding sessions in isolated sandboxes, so the job can keep running in the cloud even when a local machine is off. The environment is presented as a place to build features, fix bugs, write tests, and prepare code changes for review.
Sessions that start from Slack are slated for June 2026, giving the coding lane a near-term expansion point.
Mistral’s VS Code extension and CLI share the same coding harness, while the CLI adds skills, subagents, editable plans, session-scoped permissions, and /teleport handoff. /teleport moves a task between chat, terminal, and editor surfaces without forcing a restart. For developers, Vibe is positioned as a remote workspace that keeps one job moving across tools.
Mistral Vibe Pricing
Vibe launches with four main plans: Free, Pro at 14.99 per month, Team at 24.99 per user, and Enterprise pricing through sales. One lineup now covers solo users, classrooms, workgroups, and larger enterprise buyers.
A student plan priced at 5.99 per month and annual billing lower the entry point for individual users and smaller teams.
Higher-usage Pro access gives Pro the heavier-use pitch for long-running tasks and all-day coding.
Team domain verification, data export, and storage features put the higher tier’s value in administration rather than in a different core assistant. Pricing structure makes the paid ladder read more like packaging around the same product than like two sharply different services.
One detail remains less explicit. Mistral’s public pricing still appears to keep the same usage limits, leaving Team differentiated by storage, exports, domain controls, and workspace administration rather than by a larger quota. User evaluation will start with that point because it shows what the upgrade is really selling: management features, not a wider usage ceiling.
Before the rename, Le Chat had already added memory and MCP connectors, which makes Vibe look more like a consolidation step than a reset. Mistral had also brought the label into developer tooling through Vibe CLI, so the broader rebrand extends an existing name instead of inventing one from scratch. Earlier feature work and the prior coding label both suggest that the rename is organizing pieces Mistral had already been shipping.
Competitive pressure already surrounds the category Mistral is entering. Vibe now has to show that one package can handle office automation and remote coding without making either side of the product feel secondary. Category pressure turns the rename into a clearer market test.

