Google Maps bakes in Gemini to improve navigation and hands-free use

Over the last year, Google has added multiple AI-powered features to Maps to improve discovery and enable users to ask questions about places. Now, the company is upgrading the app with Gemini to let users ask its AI bot questions while driving, improve navigation, and perform more tasks.

While driving, users can now ask Gemini to answer questions about places of interest on their route, return results about other topics like sports or news, and even perform tasks like adding events to their calendar. You can ask multiple questions in a conversation. For example, you could ask, “Is there a budget-friendly restaurant with vegan options along my route, something within a couple of miles?” and then follow up with, “What’s parking like there?” Drivers can even report traffic incidents using Gemini, and Maps will proactively notify users of disruptions on the route ahead.

Google is also adding a new feature to Maps that combines Gemini with Street View data to improve navigation instructions. Instead of telling you to turn right after five hundred feet, Maps will now mention a nearby landmark, like a gas station, restaurant, or famous building, and highlight them before you have to make the turn. The company said that Gemini cross-references information about two hundred fifty million places with Street View images to identify important and visible landmarks for navigation.

Maps is also getting the ability to answer questions about your surroundings by working together with Google Lens. You can point the camera at places of interest, like restaurants and landmarks, and ask questions such as, “What is this place and why is it popular?”

Google said the new Gemini navigation features will be rolled out to iOS and Android devices in the coming weeks, and support for Android Auto would be coming soon. Traffic alerts are rolling out in the U.S. for Android users first. Landmark navigation is currently only going to be available in the U.S. on both iOS and Android. The Lens with Gemini feature will be functional in the U.S. later this month.