Google’s AI Mode adds 5 new languages including Hindi, Japanese, and Korean

Google is expanding AI Mode, its AI-powered Search experience, to five new languages, opening access to additional users around the world. This move follows over six months of the feature being limited to English.

On Monday, Google announced that AI Mode will now support Hindi, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, and Brazilian Portuguese. This update builds on last month’s rollout of the AI-powered experience to 180 new markets in English. The service initially launched in the U.S. and later expanded to the U.K. and India.

With this expansion, more people can now use AI Mode to ask complex questions in their preferred language while exploring the web more deeply. This was stated by Hema Budaraju, VP of Product Management at Google Search, in a blog post.

First rolled out as an experiment to Google One AI Premium subscribers in March, AI Mode is Google’s answer to AI search platforms like Perplexity and OpenAI’s ChatGPT Search. The feature utilizes a customized version of Gemini 2.5, which includes multimodal and reasoning capabilities.

In August, Google introduced agentic features in AI Mode, allowing it to find restaurant reservations. Support for local service appointments and event ticket bookings is planned for the future. These updates are currently limited to Google AI Ultra subscribers in the U.S. and are available through the “Agentic capabilities in AI Mode” experiment in Labs. The Ultra tier costs $249.99 per month.

So far, Google’s AI Mode is accessible via a dedicated tab on the search results page and a button in the search bar. The company appears to be working toward making this AI-led search experience the default soon, as indicated by Google DeepMind’s group product manager Logan Kilpatrick in a response to a user post last week.

Google’s recent AI updates, including AI Mode and AI Overviews, have been criticized for affecting search clicks. However, Google last month denied that its AI search features are killing website traffic.