ChatGPT Now Supports Global Group Chats, and It Might Redefine Online Collaboration

futuristic illustration of a group chat interface powered by AI

OpenAI has officially launched group chats in ChatGPT globally, enabling up to 20 people (across Free, Go, Plus, and Pro plans) to collaborate in a shared conversation with the AI. The feature runs on GPT-5.1 Auto and keeps personal memory separate, while giving users control over when ChatGPT participates.

OpenAI is giving ChatGPT a social upgrade: group chat. After piloting the feature in Japan, New Zealand, South Korea, and Taiwan, the company is now rolling it out worldwide for all logged-in users across its Free, Go, Plus, and Pro tiers.

Here’s how it works:

  • Anyone in a group can invite others by tapping the “people” icon or sending a shareable link. When a new member joins, ChatGPT creates a copy of the original conversation, so your private chats stay separate.
  • Each person sets up a short profile (name, username, photo), and the group appears under its own tab in the sidebar.
  • ChatGPT stays mostly in the background, chiming in only when tagged or when conversation context calls for it.
  • It can react with emoji, reference profile pictures, and generate personalized images for the group.
  • The feature runs on GPT-5.1 Auto, which dynamically picks the best model for each prompt.
  • Importantly, group chat data doesn’t feed into your personal ChatGPT memory, and ChatGPT doesn’t create new memory from these shared conversations.
  • If there’s anyone under 18 in the chat, content filters tighten for everyone, and parents can disable group chats via parental controls.

OpenAI frames this as a step toward making ChatGPT not just a private assistant, but a collaborative space for planning, creating, and decision-making together.

Why It Matters

Social AI Shift: This move signals OpenAI’s ambition to transform ChatGPT from a solo helper into a shared collaborator, directly challenging social platforms that integrate AI.

Enhanced Collaboration: With group chats, users can brainstorm, plan trips, draft documents, or debate ideas — all in real time with the help of AI.

Privacy by Design: OpenAI built these rooms with strong privacy safeguards — private chat memory remains separate, and no new memory is stored from group interactions.

Youth Safety: Additional content filters for minors and parental control options make the feature safer for underage users.

Model Efficiency: Using GPT-5.1 Auto allows for smarter, context-aware responses optimized for group dynamics.

What to Watch

Adoption & Use Cases: Will users actually adopt group chats for meaningful collaboration (e.g., work, study, planning), or will it become just another gimmick?

AI in Social Spaces: How will OpenAI leverage this feature further — could group chats be a gateway into a more social AI platform or feed-based experience?

Privacy Evolution: As more people use group chats, will OpenAI introduce finer-grained memory controls or options to opt into shared memory?

Content Moderation: Will the additional filters for minors be enough, and how will OpenAI handle potential misuse in large or public group chats?

Performance and Limits: How well will GPT-5.1 Auto scale when handling multi-user conversations? Are there rate limits or latency issues when ChatGPT is more active?

Spencer is a tech enthusiast and an AI researcher turned remote work consultant, passionate about how machine learning enhances human productivity. He explores the ethical and practical sides of AI with clarity and imagination. Twitter

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