Master Luma with our step-by-step tutorial, detailed feature walkthrough, and expert tips.
Explore the key features that make Luma powerful for content creation workflows.
Dream Machine is Luma's consumer-facing creative platform where users generate and edit video through a web interface, while Ray 2 is the underlying generative video model that powers it. Dream Machine wraps Ray 2 with creative agents, keyframing tools, and a storyboard interface, whereas Ray 2 is also accessible directly via the Luma API for developers. Think of Dream Machine as the product and Ray 2 as the engine. The Photon model similarly powers image generation within the same platform.
Luma offers a free tier that includes roughly 30 generations per month with standard queue priority and non-commercial usage. Paid plans begin around $9.99/month for the Lite tier and scale up to $29.99â$94.99/month for Plus and Unlimited tiers, which unlock faster generation, higher resolution, and commercial rights. Enterprise and API pricing is negotiated separately based on volume. Annual billing typically discounts these prices by 20â30%.
Commercial usage rights are included on all paid Luma plans, starting with the Lite tier. Free tier outputs are restricted to personal and non-commercial use, so agencies and creators delivering to clients must subscribe to at least the Lite plan. Ownership of generated content transfers to the paying user, though Luma retains the right to use content for model training on lower tiers unless you upgrade to a privacy-inclusive plan. Always review the current terms before using outputs in high-stakes commercial campaigns.
Each individual generation produces clips between 5 and 10 seconds at up to 1080p resolution. To create longer sequences, Luma offers an extend feature that continues an existing clip and keyframing that lets you stitch multiple generations together with consistent camera and subject motion. Users commonly chain 4â8 generations into 30-60 second final edits. For feature-length work, most teams export clips and assemble them in external NLEs like Premiere or DaVinci Resolve.
Compared to the 30+ video generation tools in our directory, Luma Ray 2 is generally considered best-in-class for natural camera movement and physical realism in short clips, while Runway Gen-4 offers a deeper editorial suite with inpainting, green-screen, and motion brush. OpenAI Sora supports longer native durations (up to 20 seconds) and stronger narrative coherence but has tighter access and content restrictions. Choose Luma for cinematic short-form; choose Runway for end-to-end post-production; choose Sora for longer storytelling when you have access.
Now that you know how to use Luma, it's time to put this knowledge into practice.
Sign up and follow the tutorial steps
Check pros, cons, and user feedback
See how it stacks against alternatives
Follow our tutorial and master this powerful content creation tool in minutes.
Tutorial updated March 2026