Enterprise giant Salesforce is embracing the trend of vibe coding with a new AI-powered developer tool. Vibe coding allows developers to describe what they want in natural language, and AI agents write the code. Salesforce announced this new offering, called Agentforce Vibes, to help developers work autonomously on Salesforce applications and agents by automatically handling much of the technical implementation.
Agentforce Vibes supports developers from the initial app idea phase through building and observability. It includes enterprise security and governance controls from the start. The tool features an autonomous AI coding agent named Vibe Codey. This agent is pre-connected to a company’s existing Salesforce account, enabling it to reuse already-written code and follow established coding guidelines to create applications that match existing products.
Dan Fernandez, vice president of product for developer services at Salesforce, explained that connecting Agentforce Vibes to a company’s existing account offers enterprises the best of both worlds. They can explore vibe coding without potential security issues and without starting each project from scratch. Fernandez stated that the tool provides everything a developer needs, eliminating the time spent on setup tasks like configuring model context protocols, development environments, and tools. He emphasized that this prebuilt, ready-to-use environment is a key differentiator that lowers the barrier to entry.
This release is not Salesforce’s first step into vibe coding but is the latest addition to its suite of AI developer tools. The company first released an AI-powered code building tool in 2023. Last year, it announced the general availability of Agentforce for developers at its Dreamforce conference. Fernandez noted that the new capabilities bring together the power of client tools and Agentforce, tailoring them specifically for Salesforce development to create an end-to-end experience for enterprise vibe coding.
These new capabilities are built on a fork from the open source AI coding agent Cline’s Visual Studio Code Extension. Fernandez said the company evaluated many open source coding tools and chose Cline partly because of its strong support for model context protocols, which allow AI models to securely communicate with external tools and data.
This release arrives during a dynamic period for the vibe coding industry. Many vibe coding startups are raising large funding rounds at high valuations from investors. For example, the startup Lovable is reportedly turning down unsolicited funding offers after achieving a valuation of one point eight billion dollars just eight months after launching. Another vibe coding startup, Anything, recently claimed to reach two million dollars in annual recurring revenue only two weeks after launching.
Despite the industry hype, the long-term success of these platforms remains uncertain. Due to the high volume of large language model usage required to operate them, costs for these companies are significant and profit margins are thin. However, these cost pressures are less critical when vibe coding is integrated into a larger product suite, as with Salesforce’s Agentforce Vibes.
Each Salesforce organization receives fifty requests per day using OpenAI’s GPT-5 model. Any additional requests beyond that are processed through a Salesforce-hosted Qwen three point zero model. The company is currently offering Agentforce Vibes for free to its existing users, with priced usage plans expected in the future.

