Google Introduces Gmail Live With Conversational AI Inbox Search
Google has expanded its artificial intelligence push inside Gmail by introducing Gmail Live, a new conversational AI feature that allows users to speak naturally to their inbox instead of relying on traditional keyword searches.
The feature was unveiled during Google I/O 2026 as part of the company’s broader effort to integrate Gemini AI more deeply across its consumer products and services.
Powered by Gemini, Gmail Live is designed to help users quickly retrieve information hidden inside crowded inboxes by asking questions in everyday language rather than manually searching through emails.
Gmail Live Turns Email Search Into Conversation
Instead of typing keywords into Gmail’s search bar, users can now ask spoken questions such as details about flight bookings, dentist appointments, Airbnb access codes or school events.
Google says the AI assistant can understand conversational context, respond to follow-up questions and shift between topics naturally during interactions.
Devanshi Bhandari, Gmail’s product lead, explained that Gmail Live allows users to ask naturally phrased questions and interrupt or redirect the conversation as needed.
During demonstrations ahead of Google I/O, the tool reportedly answered questions about travel arrangements, hotel bookings and children’s school activities by extracting information directly from emails.
The AI system also demonstrated the ability to distinguish between similar terms such as “field trip” and “trip” while identifying contextual relationships between different messages.
In addition, Gmail Live can retrieve highly specific information, including hotel room numbers, and infer which individuals are being referenced even when names are not explicitly mentioned.
Google Pushes Practical AI Use Cases
Google is positioning Gmail Live as an example of practical AI that solves everyday problems rather than functioning solely as a novelty chatbot.
The company has increasingly focused on demonstrating real-world consumer benefits as scrutiny grows around the rapid expansion of AI infrastructure and energy-intensive data centres.
Finding lost information inside email inboxes remains a common frustration for many users. Consequently, Google hopes conversational search inside Gmail will provide a clear and accessible AI use case for mainstream consumers.
The technology functions similarly to standalone AI chatbots such as Gemini or ChatGPT, but operates directly within Gmail using personal inbox data.
Google also confirmed that similar voice-powered AI capabilities are coming to Google Keep, its note-taking and task management application.
Traditional Gmail Search Will Remain Available
Despite the AI expansion, Google stressed that Gmail Live will not replace traditional Gmail search. Instead, the conversational assistant will exist alongside the standard search interface.
The company appears cautious about forcing users into fully AI-driven experiences after previous backlash surrounding AI-powered search changes in Google Photos.
Google had earlier attempted to prioritise AI search features in Photos before reversing course following widespread complaints from users who preferred conventional search methods.
Beyond Gmail Live, Gmail is also receiving additional AI-powered tools, including ready-to-send draft suggestions, faster file access and enhanced task management features that allow users to mark individual to-do items as completed directly from their inbox.
AI Inbox Expands Beyond Premium Subscribers
Google additionally announced that its broader AI Inbox experience, introduced earlier this year, will expand beyond Google AI Ultra subscribers.
The feature will now become available to Google AI Pro and Plus subscribers as well. AI Inbox provides users with a consolidated overview of important tasks, unread items and pending actions pulled from across their email accounts.
However, the new voice-powered Gmail Live functionality will initially remain exclusive to Google AI Ultra subscribers when it launches later this summer.
The move reflects Google’s wider strategy of using premium AI features to encourage adoption of its subscription-based AI services while integrating Gemini across its ecosystem of productivity and communication tools.

