At I/O this year, Google showcased Gmail Live, a new Gemini-powered feature that lets users search their inbox using their voice instead of typing. The feature has now moved into testing, with 9to5Google reporting that it’s rolling out to a small group of Android and iOS users this week.
How Gmail Live works
The feature adds a small Live icon to Gmail’s search bar. Tapping it opens a full-screen voice interface that greets users with suggested prompts, like “What are updates on my latest orders?” and “What are my upcoming travel dates?”
Once the user starts speaking, a blue glow appears along the edge of the screen while the query gets transcribed in real time. Gmail Live then processes the question and reads the answer out loud. The response also appears on the screen alongside the original email, making it easy for users to verify the details.
The voice interface also has two buttons at the bottom that let users mute their microphone or exit Gmail Live and switch back to their inbox.
Part of Google’s bigger voice push
Gmail Live joins a growing list of voice-based AI features across Google’s apps and services. It follows Gemini Live, which lets users have natural, real-time conversations with Google’s AI assistant and even handle tasks like setting reminders or adding calendar events. Search Live brought a similar back-and-forth voice experience to Google Search’s AI Mode earlier this year, letting users ask follow-up questions out loud and get spoken answers along with links to relevant web pages.
Gmail Live is set to reach AI Pro and Ultra subscribers later this summer once testing wraps up. Google plans to add similar functionality to Docs and Keep, extending the same voice-first approach to drafting documents and jotting down notes on the go.