OpenAI Launches Smarter, More Conversational ChatGPT 5.1

OpenAI today upgraded GPT-5 to GPT-5.1, the next-generation version of the AI model that powers ChatGPT. There are two versions of GPT-5.1, including Instant and Thinking.

chatgpt logo
Instant is warmer, more intelligent, and better at following instructions, according to OpenAI, while GPT-5.1 Thinking is easier to understand, faster on simple tasks, and more persistent on complex tasks.

OpenAI says that users can expect a more enjoyable communication experience, with options to more easily customize ChatGPT's tone. There are new presets for tone, including Professional, Candid, and Quirky. The new presets join the existing Default, Nerdy, Cynical, Friendly (previously Listener), and Efficient (previously Robot) options. ChatGPT can also proactively offer to update preferences during conversations when you ask for a certain tone or style, and there are fine tuning options to adjust how concise, warm, or scannable responses are, along with how often it employs emojis.

By default, GPT-5.1 Instant is warmer and more playful, and more likely to adhere to parameters that you set. GPT-5.1 Thinking is able to adapt thinking time more precisely to the question, and responses are clearer with fewer undefined terms. It's also warmer and more empathetic than before.

Questions will continue to be routed to the most suitable model using GPT-5.1 Auto. GPT 5.1 Instant and Thinking are rolling out to users today, with paid Pro, Plus, Go, and Business users set to get access first, then free and logged-out users. Enterprise and Edu users will get a seven-day early-access toggle, after which GPT-5.1 will become the default model.

OpenAI plans to roll out GPT-5.1 gradually to keep performance stable, so not all users will see it right away.

GPT-5 will remain available in the legacy models dropdown for paid subscribers for the next three months.

Popular Stories

airpods pro 3 purple

New, Higher End AirPods Pro Coming This Year

Tuesday January 20, 2026 9:05 am PST by
Apple is planning to debut a high-end secondary version of AirPods Pro 3 this year, sitting in the lineup alongside the current model, reports suggest. Back in September 2025, supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reported that Apple is planning to introduce a successor to the AirPods Pro 3 in 2026. This would be somewhat unusual since Apple normally waits around three years to make major...
smaller dynamic island iphone 18 pro Filip Vabrous%CC%8Cek

iPhone 18 Pro Leak: Smaller Dynamic Island, No Top-Left Camera Cutout

Tuesday January 20, 2026 2:34 am PST by
Over the last few months, rumors around the iPhone 18 Pro's front-panel design have been conflicted, with some supply-chain leaks pointing to under-display Face ID, reports suggesting a top-left hole-punch camera, and debate over whether the familiar Dynamic Island will shrink, shift, or disappear entirely. Today, Weibo-based leaker Instant Digital shared new details that appear to clarify the ...
iOS 27 Mock Quick

iOS 27 Will Add These 8 New Features to Your iPhone

Sunday January 18, 2026 3:51 pm PST by
iOS 27 is still many months away, but there are already plenty of rumors about new features that will be included in the software update. The first beta of iOS 27 will be released during WWDC 2026 in June, and the update should be released to all users with a compatible iPhone in September. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman said that iOS 27 will be similar to Mac OS X Snow Leopard, in the sense...
14 inch MacBook Pro Keyboard

MacBook Pro Buyers Now Facing Up to a Two-Month Wait Ahead of New Models

Sunday January 18, 2026 6:50 pm PST by
MacBook Pro availability is tightening on Apple's online store, with select configurations facing up to a two-month delivery timeframe in the United States. A few 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro configurations with an M4 Pro chip are not facing any shipping delay, but estimated delivery dates for many configurations with an M4 Max chip range from February 6 to February 24 or even later. At...
Apple Logo Spotlight

Apple Expected to Unveil Five All-New Products This Year

Wednesday January 21, 2026 10:54 am PST by
In addition to updating many of its existing products, Apple is expected to unveil five all-new products this year, including a smart home hub, a Face ID doorbell, a MacBook with an A18 Pro chip, a foldable iPhone, and augmented reality glasses. Below, we have recapped rumored features for each product. Smart Home Hub Apple home hub (concept) Apple's long-rumored smart home hub should...

Top Rated Comments

turbineseaplane Avatar
10 weeks ago
Awful company with zero moral or ethical values.

I will avoid them at all costs.
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
CocktailHour Avatar
10 weeks ago
Just waiting for the AI Bubble to burst wide open.
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
212rikanmofo Avatar
10 weeks ago
AI is a huge mistake.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
cjsuk Avatar
10 weeks ago

There is a bubble in some instances, mainly large LLM companies but the technology is bigger than the internet itself. We've deployed internal LLM's and processes at our company and we are starting to see productivity gains start to accelerate. Ultimately people won't get replaced by AI (maybe robots doing manufacturing or warfare drones) but people who don't use AI will get replaced by those that do and can. Our company is going to monitor use and make employment decisions based on productivity and use.
Some thinking points for your faith argument from an analytical perspective (this is my job):

1. Your company will be in trouble when the LLM token pricing goes through the roof.
2. Your company will be in trouble when the LLM company changes the model and your prompts do not function correctly.
3. Your company will be in trouble when the LLM company goes down the toilet and the other LLM company gets an influx of traffic they can't handle with their hardware provision. This also incurs point 1 and 2 as a damage multiplier.
4. It's a tangible business risk building on technology which has absolutely no working revenue model. It may disappear tomorrow.
5. You do not have the cash, hardware or resources to train your own model and make a ROI on it and run it yourself even on a cloud platform.
6. You are likely to reach regulatory and legal problems when it comes to making employment decisions based on automation of this class (chain of proof).
7. Robots and manufacturing have near zero use for LLMs. There is some specific AI use cases in inspection. That is it. Having humanoid robots working in a factory setting is science fiction. Production is required to be 100% deterministic and LLMs are not.
8. You can't replace people with AI. But you can replace people with AI spending and watch your stock prices rise while burying the lay off.

This whole thing is faith without empiricism.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
OliOliOliOli Avatar
10 weeks ago


Attachment Image
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Stevez67 Avatar
10 weeks ago
It's not "smart." That's the marketing used to sell it because if they simple said it was an improved version 2.1, 2.2, and 2.3, etc., no one would get excited about it. It is an energy-hungry enhanced search feature algorithm. It relies on everyone else's data as a raw material for free, everyone else paying higher electricity costs, and then wants to charge the source of its raw material for its use. What a deal! I'm sure, behind the scenes somewhere, they're chuckling about this being the mother of all subscription services.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)