Google is continuing its work of adding AI to Search—whether you want it or not. Since March, the company has been testing something called AI Mode. See, Google says that they've heard from "power users" that they are looking for AI responses from more of their Google searches. In response, AI Mode lets you ask the AI multi-part questions that offers more advanced reasoning, thinking, and multimodal (combination of text, images, and video) functions.
On paper, it sounds like a more complex AI Overview, but it's a bit more nuanced than that. AI Mode is its own tab in Search, that turns the UI into more of what you'd expect from ChatGPT or Gemini. Google says this experience is supposed to combine what would've taken multiple searches into one: You ask the AI something complicated, it reasons through it (showing its thinking along the way) and delivers a full answer with multiple results, claims, and summaries—citing its sources for each of its generations.
Credit: GoogleGoogle uses the following query to demonstrate this approach: “What's the difference in sleep tracking features between a smart ring, smartwatch and tracking mat?" AI Mode supposedly takes that multi-part question, develops a multi-step "plan" to conduct a number of searches to find the information, and changes that plan according to the results it returns.
First, AI Mode is getting Gemini 2.5, Google's "most intelligent model," this week. Whether that's today or sometime this weekend, remains to be seen, but it'll be interesting to see how Gemini 2.5 affects AI Mode's performance—at least, as long as you've been using it with Gemini 2.0.
Google is also adding agentic capabilities to AI Mode. "Agentic" is the current AI buzzword floating around these days, which basically covers any task the AI performs on your behalf. As such, agentic AI is a goal for many companies looking to turn AI assistants into real assistants. Whether or not you'll actually find these tools helpful is another thing altogether, but you can expect some agentic AI tools in AI Mode in the coming months. For example, you may be able to ask AI Mode to find you affordable tickets to a particular baseball game on a specific night, and not only will it pull up the links for you, it'll fill out all the necessary forms as well, so, in theory, you only need to confirm your purchase.
AI Mode will also be able to pull from your past searches, as well as your Google apps (starting with Gmail), if you opt-in. The idea is to show you more relevant results based on what you've done in the past and what you like.
How to try AI Mode
To use AI Mode, just click the button. Google will offer suggested prompts, but you can type out any query you have. You can enter the same types of searches you normally would, but give a multi-part question a try. (Google's promotional materials encourage you to ask "10 questions in one.")
If you've ever used a chatbot's web search, whether that be Google's Gemini or ChatGPT, this will be a familiar experience. Answers are broken down into sections, with the usual AI bullet points and links to individual sources. You may also get some interactive elements: If you've asked about a specific location, for example, you may see an in-line Google Maps window.
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