OpenAI is launching a new feature in its popular chatbot ChatGPT: group chats. Users can now invite up to 20 people to join their conversation with the AI, effectively turning it into a virtual meeting space.
The new feature allows users to collaborate on tasks such as planning a dinner party or creating travel plans with ease. All they need to do is select the "people" icon in the top-right corner of the ChatGPT app and copy their existing chat to a new group conversation. Others can then be added by sending them a link to the conversation.
ChatGPT will automatically determine when to contribute and when to stay silent, based on the flow of the conversation. Users can also mention "ChatGPT" in a message if they want a response from the AI. In addition, ChatGPT can react to messages with emojis and reference profile photos.
Group chats are powered by GPT-5.1 Auto, which chooses the best model to respond with based on the prompt and the models available to the user that ChatGPT is responding to. Rate limits will apply when ChatGPT sends a message in the chat, but this won't affect the conversations themselves.
The feature is now available globally to all logged-in users following an initial pilot earlier this month.
The new feature allows users to collaborate on tasks such as planning a dinner party or creating travel plans with ease. All they need to do is select the "people" icon in the top-right corner of the ChatGPT app and copy their existing chat to a new group conversation. Others can then be added by sending them a link to the conversation.
ChatGPT will automatically determine when to contribute and when to stay silent, based on the flow of the conversation. Users can also mention "ChatGPT" in a message if they want a response from the AI. In addition, ChatGPT can react to messages with emojis and reference profile photos.
Group chats are powered by GPT-5.1 Auto, which chooses the best model to respond with based on the prompt and the models available to the user that ChatGPT is responding to. Rate limits will apply when ChatGPT sends a message in the chat, but this won't affect the conversations themselves.
The feature is now available globally to all logged-in users following an initial pilot earlier this month.