Audience

Developers and engineering teams needing a tool to accelerate AI‑driven coding from prototype to production with structured, spec‑driven development and autonomous AI agents

About Kiro

Kiro is an AI‑powered integrated development environment that brings structure to AI‑driven coding by converting natural‑language prompts into clear requirements, system designs, and discrete implementation tasks validated by robust tests. Built from the ground up for agentic workflows, it features spec‑driven development, multimodal chat, “agent hooks” that trigger background tasks on events like file saves, and an autopilot mode that autonomously runs large scripts while keeping you in control. With smart context management, Kiro reduces repetitive prompts and helps implement complex features across large codebases. Native MCP integrations let you connect to documentation, databases, and APIs, and you can guide development with images of UI designs or architecture diagrams. Enterprise‑grade security and privacy ensure safe deployment, while support for Claude Sonnet models, Open VSX plugins, and existing VS Code settings delivers a familiar yet AI‑supercharged experience.

Pricing

Starting Price:
$19 per month
Free Version:
Free Version available.

Integrations

API:
Yes, Kiro offers API access

Ratings/Reviews - 1 User Review

Overall 5.0 / 5
ease 5.0 / 5
features 4.0 / 5
design 5.0 / 5
support 4.0 / 5

Company Information

Amazon Web Services
Founded: 2002
United States
kiro.dev/

Videos and Screen Captures

Kiro Screenshot 1
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Product Details

Platforms Supported
Windows
Mac
Linux
Training
Documentation
Videos
Support
Online

Kiro Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What kinds of users and organization types does Kiro work with?
Q: What languages does Kiro support in their product?
Q: What other applications or services does Kiro integrate with?
Q: Does Kiro have an API?
Q: What type of training does Kiro provide?
Q: How much does Kiro cost?

Kiro Product Features

IDE

Code Completion
Compiler
Cross Platform Support
Debugger
Drag and Drop UI
Integrations and Plugins
Multi Language Support
Project Management
Text Editor / Code Editor

Kiro Additional Categories

Kiro Verified User Reviews

Write a Review
  • Justin M.
    Principal Engineer
    Used the software for: Less than 6 months
    Frequency of Use: Daily
    User Role: User
    Company Size: 1,000 - 4,999
    Design
    Ease
    Features
    Pricing
    Support
    Probability You Would Recommend?
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

    "A great tool for modern development"

    Posted 2025-12-19

    Pros: Fast, Focused, and Flexible Kiro is a clean, fast IDE that prioritizes focus and responsiveness. Setup is straightforward, and the interface keeps essential panels (editor, explorer, terminal) within easy reach without feeling cluttered. Standout strengths include snappy file navigation, sensible defaults, and low-friction workflows for running and debugging projects. While the extension ecosystem isn’t as vast as some incumbents, the built-in features cover most daily needs, and performance remains solid even on larger codebases. If you value a distraction‑free environment with smart ergonomics over endless plugins, Kiro is an excellent choice. I’d love to see deeper VCS insights and more out‑of‑the‑box language tooling, but overall it’s a productive, reliable IDE.

    Cons: Where it could improve

    Ecosystem depth: If you rely on niche language tooling or specialized plugins, you may find fewer options compared to larger marketplaces.
    Advanced VCS views: Basic Git workflows are smooth, but richer features (commit graph, interactive rebase UI, code review surfaces) would elevate team use.
    Language intelligence: Autocomplete and refactoring are solid for mainstream languages; deeper static analysis and framework-aware hints would be welcome.

    Overall: What works well

    Performance and stability: Startup and project indexing feel quick, and navigation remains responsive on medium-to-large repos.
    UX and discoverability: The layout is clean with sensible defaults. Keyboard shortcuts are consistent, and the command palette makes common actions easy to find.
    Built-in essentials: Integrated terminal, debugger, and code search cover everyday tasks without requiring heavy customization.
    Quality-of-life details: Thoughtful touches—like quick file switching, contextual actions, and unobtrusive notifications—support focus.

    Read More...
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