Google Photos brings its prompt-based editing feature to India, Australia andJapan

Google is bringing AI-powered photo editing to more users around the world. This update makes it easier to fix your photos with simple text commands instead of complicated editing tools. The company announced on Tuesday that it is expanding natural language-based editing in Google Photos to additional countries, including Australia, India, and Japan.

The feature was first launched for Pixel 10 users in the United States last August. It allows people to describe the changes they want to make to their photos rather than manually adjusting sliders or learning complex editing software. Users in these newly supported countries will now see a “Help me Edit” box when they tap the edit option on a photo. From there, they can either select from suggested prompts or type their own requests in plain language. For example, you could ask the app to remove the motorcycle in the background, reduce the background blur, or use a more general command like restore this old photo.

The AI can handle surprisingly specific requests. You can ask it to edit a friend’s pose, remove their glasses, or even have them open their eyes in a photo where they blinked. The feature uses Google’s Nano Banana image model to transform photos, and all the processing happens directly within the app without requiring an internet connection for the actual editing.

The feature will work on any Android device with at least 4GB of RAM running Android 8.0 or higher, meaning it is not limited to Google’s own Pixel phones. Along with this geographic expansion, Google is also adding language support beyond English, including Hindi, Tamil, Marathi, Telugu, Bengali, and Gujarati. This makes the tool accessible to millions more users in their native languages.

Google is also rolling out C2PA Content Credentials support in Google Photos for these countries. This metadata will indicate when an image was created or edited using AI. As AI-generated and AI-edited images become more common, credentials like C2PA help users understand what they are looking at.

The expansion is the latest in Google’s push to integrate AI throughout Google Photos. Last November, the company expanded AI-powered search capabilities to over 100 countries with support for more than 17 languages. It also introduced AI templates that can convert photos into different artistic styles. Just last week, Google rolled out a “Meme me” feature that lets users combine reference templates with their own images to create memes.