Veo 4 release status and where Veo fits on OmniArt
Veo 4 release status: what's confirmed, what Veo 3.1 already does, and how to use Veo today on OmniArt — without waiting on a single model launch.

Every few months a single model release becomes the thing creators wait on, and right now that's Veo 4. The short version: as of this writing, Veo 3.1 remains the current shipping version, and Google has not confirmed a Veo 4 release date. The more useful version, if you actually have work to ship, is that you don't need to wait — Veo is one capable model among many on OmniArt, and the best clip is rarely gated on one launch.
This piece separates what's confirmed from what's speculation, then covers how to get Veo-grade results today inside a workspace that doesn't bet everything on one engine.
What's actually confirmed
- Veo 3.1 is current. It ships native 4K and clean spatial audio, with strong image adherence and cinematic motion interpretation.
- No official Veo 4 date. Treat any specific timeline you see as unconfirmed until Google says otherwise.
- The trajectory is clear even if the date isn't. Each Veo release has pushed resolution, duration, audio, and control. A future version will likely continue that — but "likely" is not "scheduled."
Warning
What a Veo 4 would plausibly bring
Based on the release pattern, the reasonable expectations are longer single-clip duration, higher native resolution and frame rates, tighter prompt and camera control, and richer native audio. None of that is announced — it's an informed read on direction, useful for planning, not for promising a client a delivery date.
Use Veo today on OmniArt
You don't have to choose between "wait for Veo 4" and "settle." Veo 3.1 is available in OmniArt's video workspace right now for broadcast-grade, large-screen work — and it sits next to the rest of the lineup so you can pick per shot:
| The shot needs | Reach for |
|---|---|
| Native 4K, spatial audio, polish | Veo 3.1 |
| Long single takes | Sora 2 |
| Storyboarded, multi-shot continuity | Kling, V6 + BACH |
| Fast, stylized, energetic clips | PixVerse models, available on OmniArt Studio |
| Value at volume | Kling for cost-efficient finished seconds |
Why model breadth beats waiting
A pipeline built around one model inherits that model's release schedule and its weak spots. A multi-model workspace doesn't. When a new version lands — Veo 4 or anything else — it becomes one more option you can switch to on the same prompt, not a migration. You keep shipping in the meantime, and you upgrade by choosing, not by re-platforming.
Note
Getting started on OmniArt
Take the brief you were saving for Veo 4 and render it now — run it through Veo 3.1 and one other model in OmniArt's video workspace, and compare. When the next release arrives, you'll add it to a workflow that's already producing, instead of starting over. Ship today; upgrade when it's real.
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