Kling launches Team Plan with 15-member shared workspaces and commercial-use coverage
Kling rolled out a Team Plan on desktop and web with shared spaces, collaboration tools, and commercial-use permissions. Use it to centralize prompts, assets, and review loops instead of passing projects around manually.

TL;DR
- Kling's launch post says the new Team Plan is live on desktop and web, with shared workspaces for up to 15 members.
- The same launch post positions the plan around collaboration and commercial-use coverage, while a related pricing repost adds a credit price point of $0.59 per 100 credits.
- Recent community examples like a two-character tutorial and a one-line prompt demo show the kind of prompt, motion, and review work that teams can now keep inside one shared space instead of passing files around manually.
What shipped
Kling has launched a Team Plan across its desktop app and web app, giving users a shared workspace with support for up to 15 members. The company says the plan is built for collaborative workflow management and includes commercial-use coverage, which makes this more than a seat bundle for hobby use.
A repost of the announcement from an affiliate-style share also cites credits at $0.59 per 100. Kling's own post does not spell out pricing mechanics in the same detail, so that number should be treated as a secondary claim rather than the primary launch detail.
Why this matters for creative workflows
The timing fits how creators are already using Kling: one recent tutorial focuses on motion control for putting two characters in the same scene, which is the kind of shot design that usually involves prompt tweaks, version comparisons, and feedback across multiple iterations. A shared workspace gives teams one place to keep those assets and revisions instead of splitting them across chats, folders, and local exports.
Another creator demo shows Kling 3.0 generating a cinematic “stairway to heaven” clip from a single short prompt plus a clean visual concept. That kind of lightweight prompting is easy to start solo, but once a project moves into client review, variant tracking, or commercial delivery, Kling's new shared-space and permissions layer becomes the more consequential part of the release.