docs/features/subagents.mdx
Subagents let Cline spawn focused research agents that run in parallel. Each subagent gets its own prompt and context window, explores the codebase independently, and returns a detailed report to the main agent. This keeps the main agent's context clean while gathering broad information fast.
<Tip> Subagents is an experimental feature. Behavior may change in future releases. </Tip>When Cline uses the use_subagents tool, it launches independent agents simultaneously. Each one:
Subagent costs (tokens and API spend) are tracked separately per subagent and rolled into the task's total cost. You can see per-subagent stats (tool calls, tokens, cost) in the chat UI as they run.
Subagents are disabled by default. To turn them on:
This setting applies across all editors (VS Code, JetBrains, CLI).
Cline does not automatically decide to use subagents. You need to ask for them in your prompt. When the feature is enabled and you mention subagents (or describe a task that benefits from parallel exploration), Cline will use the use_subagents tool.
Example prompts:
Each subagent prompt should describe a focused research question. Cline will run them in parallel and synthesize the results. You can also run only one subagent when the task is small enough that parallel discovery would be unnecessary overhead.
Subagents follow the Read project files auto-approve permission. If you have "Read project files" enabled in Auto Approve, subagent launches will be auto-approved.
In YOLO mode, subagents are always auto-approved.
If auto-approve is off, Cline will ask for your approval before launching subagents, showing you the prompts it plans to send.
Subagents are read-only research agents. Here is what they have access to:
| Tool | Purpose |
|---|---|
read_file | Read file contents |
list_files | List directory contents |
search_files | Regex search across files |
list_code_definition_names | List top-level classes, functions, and methods |
execute_command | Run read-only commands (ls, grep, git log, git diff, etc.) |
use_skill | Load and activate skills |
Subagents cannot write files, apply patches, use the browser, access MCP servers, or perform web searches. They also cannot spawn their own subagents.
<Note> Commands run by subagents execute in the background and are restricted to read-only operations. Subagents will not run commands that modify files or system state. Subagents also benefit from command pipelines and filters to narrow output quickly before reading files, for example `rg ... | sort | uniq`. </Note>Subagents work best when you need broad context from multiple areas of a codebase at once:
For small, focused tasks where you already know which files to look at, subagents add unnecessary overhead. Just ask Cline directly.