What Is Midjourney? The AI Image Generator Explained
Midjourney is a subscription-only AI service that turns a line of text into a finished image, and since 2025, into video as well. You write a prompt, the model interprets it, and a few seconds later you have a grid of four pictures to refine. It is built by Midjourney, Inc., a small independent research lab in San Francisco founded by David Holz, and it went into open beta on July 12, 2022. Since then it has become one of the most recognizable names in generative art, both for the quality of its output and for the controversy around how its models were trained.
If you have only ever heard that Midjourney "runs on Discord," that is half the picture and slightly out of date. You can still drive it through a Discord bot, but there is now a full web app at midjourney.com with a proper editor. This breakdown walks through what the tool actually is, how you get into it, the current version, the features practitioners reach for daily, what it costs, and the copyright lawsuits you should understand before you build a workflow on top of it.
What Is Midjourney?
Midjourney is a generative AI image service. You give it a description in plain language, and it produces original artwork that matches that description. The product covers both still images and, more recently, short video clips generated from a starting image. It does not edit your existing photos the way a traditional design tool does, and it is not a chatbot. Its single job is to translate words and reference images into new pictures.
The company behind it is deliberately small. Midjourney, Inc. is an independent research lab rather than a division of a tech giant, and its founder, David Holz, previously co-founded the motion-tracking company Leap Motion. That independence shapes the product: there is no enterprise sales motion bolted on, no sprawling cloud platform, and a famously direct relationship between the research team and the community that uses the tool.
Practitioner note: Think of Midjourney as a specialist, not a Swiss Army knife. It is exceptional at producing striking, stylized imagery from a prompt, but it deliberately does not try to be a general assistant. If your workflow needs precise text rendering, exact brand-color matching, or pixel-level photo retouching, you will still pair it with a conventional editor.
How You Access Midjourney
There are two ways in, and they share the same account. The first is the original route through Discord. You join the official Midjourney Discord server, or you invite the Midjourney bot into a server of your own, or you direct-message the bot. From there you issue commands and the bot replies with your images in the channel. The second route is the web app at midjourney.com, which gives you a dedicated editor with pan, zoom, region-based variation, and inpainting, and it stays in sync with whatever you generate on Discord.
One piece of outdated advice worth correcting: Midjourney used to require you to generate 1,000 images on Discord before it would grant access to the web experience. That gate has been removed. New subscribers can use the web app directly. For most people starting today, the web editor is the more comfortable home, with Discord remaining popular for those who like generating alongside a community.
Whichever door you walk through, there is a paywall behind it. Midjourney is subscription-only. There is no permanent free tier and there has been no free trial since March 2023, a point worth stating plainly because so many guides still imply you can try it for nothing.
The /imagine Workflow
The core loop is simple enough to learn in a minute. You start a generation with the /imagine command followed by your prompt. Midjourney returns a grid of four candidate images. From there you upscale the one you like to get a higher-resolution version, or you ask for variations to explore a direction further. On the web app the same loop is driven through the editor rather than a chat command, but the rhythm of prompt, grid, refine is identical.
The official documentation organizes its tutorials around exactly this progression. There are starter walkthroughs such as "Start Here: Making your First Image," and then deeper guides like "Get Better Images with Personalization," "Style References," and "Create Your First Video." That ordering reflects how the tool is meant to be learned: get a result first, then layer on the parameters that give you control. We cover that hands-on sequence in the dedicated how-to guide linked at the end of this article.
Versions: V8.1 Is the Current Release
Midjourney's model has been versioned aggressively, and the version you run changes the look and the feature set dramatically. The current stable release is V8.1, which arrived in alpha on April 14, 2026. It keeps the aesthetic direction of V7 and adds several practical upgrades: HD images at 2K resolution through the --hd parameter with no separate upscale step, Image Prompts, a Prompt Shortener, and an updated Describe tool. To use V8.1 you first enable the Global V7/V8 Personalization Profile, which tunes results toward your own taste.
It is worth being precise here, because search results and older tutorials lag behind reality. A lot of content still treats V7 as the newest model. It is not. V7 launched on April 4, 2025, V8 followed on March 17, 2026, and V8.1 is the current version on top of that. If you are reading a prompt guide written for V7, the techniques mostly still apply, but the defaults and some parameters have moved on.
One technical detail ties the lineage together: from V4 onward, Midjourney's models have been trained on Google TPUs rather than the GPU hardware many competitors use. That choice sits in the background of every version bump.
The Features Practitioners Actually Use
Beyond the basic prompt, Midjourney's real strength lives in a handful of reference and control parameters. These are what separate a lucky one-off image from a repeatable, art-directed result. Four of them come up constantly.
Alongside these, Midjourney exposes parameters such as Stylize and Chaos (also surfaced as Variety) that nudge how literal or how adventurous the model is, plus Personalization Profiles that bend results toward your own preferences. The exact aspect-ratio and parameter syntax shifts between versions, so when in doubt, the official docs are the source of truth rather than any single tutorial.
Video deserves its own note. Since 2025 Midjourney can animate a starting image into a short clip. Crucially, video does not get its own separate plan or quota. It draws from the same pool of fast GPU time your images use, and high-definition video is expensive in that budget, with an HD batch running on the order of 26 GPU minutes. We will come back to what GPU time means for your bill in the pricing section.
Pricing: You Buy GPU Time, Not Images
The single most misunderstood thing about Midjourney pricing is the unit you are buying. You are not paying per image. You are paying for fast GPU time. Each plan includes a monthly allotment of fast GPU hours, and a still image consumes roughly one GPU minute while an HD video batch can burn around 26. When you run out of fast time, higher plans let you keep going in Relax mode, or you can buy more fast hours at $4 per hour, and those purchased hours do not expire.
Annual billing knocks 20% off every tier and is paid upfront, which is why the per-month annual figures above are lower than the monthly prices. Relax mode, available from Standard up, gives you unlimited generations that wait in a queue, typically zero to thirty minutes, instead of drawing down fast time. Relax covers images on Standard and higher and SD video on Pro and Mega, but HD video, permutations, and Max Upscale always require fast time. Two practical takeaways: the cheapest real entry is the $10 Basic plan ($8 a month annual), and there is no free option at all.
Commercial use: Every paid subscription grants Midjourney's General Commercial Terms, so you are free to use the images and videos you generate in just about any way you want. The one catch that catches businesses: any company with more than $1,000,000 USD in gross annual revenue must be on the Pro or Mega plan. Pricing here was verified on June 9, 2026; because Midjourney changes plans periodically, confirm current rates on midjourney.com before subscribing.
The Copyright Question You Should Understand
Any honest explanation of Midjourney has to address the legal cloud over how its models were trained. The core dispute is about training-data provenance: whether building an image model on a vast scrape of existing artwork, without the artists' permission, infringes their copyrights. This is an active, unresolved area of law, and Midjourney is one of its central test cases.
The litigation has grown over time. A group of artists, Sarah Andersen, Kelly McKernan, and Karla Ortiz, filed suit in January 2023. That case expanded in November 2023 to represent more than 4,700 artists. The stakes rose sharply in 2025 when major studios joined in: Universal and Disney filed suit on June 11, 2025, and Warner Bros. Discovery followed on September 4, 2025, citing generated images that resemble their copyrighted characters.
None of this is a reason to avoid the tool, and it is not a verdict on its quality. It is a reason to use it with your eyes open. Treat the commercial rights Midjourney grants as the platform's position, not as a guarantee against third-party claims, and apply normal diligence when generated work will be published or sold.
Who Midjourney Is For
Midjourney rewards people who want striking, stylized output and are willing to learn a prompting craft to get it. It is less suited to anyone who needs strict reproducibility or precise control over every pixel. Here is how that maps onto common roles.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Midjourney free?
No. Midjourney has no permanent free tier and removed its free trial in March 2023. The least expensive way to use it is the Basic plan at $10 per month, or $8 per month on annual billing. If a guide tells you that you can try it for free, that information is out of date.
What is the latest version of Midjourney?
V8.1, released in alpha on April 14, 2026. It builds on V8 (March 2026) and V7 (April 2025), carrying the V7 aesthetic while adding native HD images via --hd, Image Prompts, a Prompt Shortener, and an updated Describe tool. Despite still being widely searched, V7 is not the current model.
Do I still need Discord to use Midjourney?
No. You can run Midjourney entirely through the web app at midjourney.com, which includes a full editor. The Discord bot remains available and popular, and both share the same account and history. The old requirement to generate 1,000 images on Discord before getting web access has been removed.
Can I use Midjourney images commercially?
A paid subscription grants Midjourney's General Commercial Terms, which let you use generated images and videos for most purposes. Companies with more than $1,000,000 in gross annual revenue must be on the Pro or Mega plan. Note that the platform's terms do not shield you from third-party copyright claims, so avoid prompts that reproduce recognizable franchises for commercial work.
How does Midjourney bill, by image or by time?
By time. You buy fast GPU hours, not a fixed number of images. A still image costs roughly one GPU minute, an HD video batch around 26. When fast time runs out, Standard and higher plans offer unlimited but queued Relax generations, and you can buy extra fast hours at $4 each.
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