Moonshot AI has introduced Kimi K2.7 Code, a new coding agent and command-line tool aimed at developers working across terminals, IDEs and larger software projects. The company is positioning the release as part of its Kimi Code offering, which is designed to fit into existing development workflows and help complete programming tasks more quickly.
The new model is now integrated into Kimi for Coding, but it is only available when Thinking mode is turned on. Moonshot AI says the updated system is intended to be more responsive and dependable for coding work, particularly when users are dealing with more demanding development tasks.
Kimi Code is described as a coding-focused feature within the broader Kimi membership. According to the product information, it is meant to work across different environments, including the terminal and integrated development environments, so users can access the assistant from multiple parts of their workflow.
The company is also offering a Kimi Code CLI, which brings the model into the command line. The CLI is presented as a tool that can answer questions, assist with software development, analyze codebases, run commands, process files and support automated technical tasks. Moonshot AI says it can also search the web for current information and documentation, and it can handle multiple kinds of programming work.
The product page highlights a quick installation method for users who want to try the tool locally. Moonshot AI is promoting the assistant as something that can be dropped into existing development setups rather than requiring a new workflow.
Access to Kimi Code comes through the company’s membership plans. Moonshot AI lists four tiers with monthly and annual billing options. The plans are Moderato, Allegretto, Allegro and Vivace, with the higher tiers offering larger quotas and greater concurrency.
The entry-level Moderato plan is priced at $15 per month or $180 per year. Allegretto is listed at $31 per month or $372 per year. Allegro costs $79 per month or $948 per year, while Vivace is priced at $159 per month or $1,908 per year. Moonshot AI says each plan also includes other Kimi membership benefits.
The company says the subscription model includes refreshed usage quotas and, on some plans, multi-device login support. Higher tiers are aimed at users handling more intensive development workloads and larger codebases.
Moonshot AI has been expanding Kimi as a broader productivity and coding product, and K2.7 Code appears to be its latest step in that direction. The company’s messaging emphasizes speed, reliability and flexibility, especially for developers who work across several tools and projects.
By tying the new model to Kimi Code and the CLI, Moonshot AI is betting that developers want an assistant that can move between prompt-based chat, terminal use and project-level code analysis without switching products. The release adds another option in a fast-moving market for AI coding tools, where companies are competing to offer assistants that can support more of the software development process.
Moonshot AI has not detailed broader technical benchmarks in the material provided, but it is presenting K2.7 Code as a next-generation code agent built for more complex workflows. The rollout suggests the company sees coding assistance as a major use case for its Kimi ecosystem.