Google Maps just got a huge AI boost for millions — 4 new upgrades you can try now
Google Maps just got a big upgrade, becoming smarter, easier, and more hands-free thanks to a push of new Gemini AI features. According to Google's announcement, having Gemini inside Google Maps is like “having a knowledgeable friend in the passenger seat who can confidently help you get where you’re going.”
While Google Maps has had AI features built in before, this upgrade brings some noticeable improvements, mostly to the driver’s ability to find destinations along their routes. It boils down to four new features.
These new features will begin to roll out on both Android and iOS Google Maps over the next couple of weeks. Android Auto will then follow after this first initial rollout.
A conversational assistant
By bringing the Gemini assistant to Google Maps, users will be able to interact with the map system more easily than before. Along with being able to track down places along your route, find nearby chargers, or share your ETA with friends, you can also ask multi-step complicated requests.
For example, asking Gemini to “find a nearby restaurant within the next four miles on my current route that serves affordable vegetarian food.” What is the parking like and is it busy?”
These kinds of requests wouldn’t have been possible with the previous Google Assistant features in maps, now offering multiple steps of information in one go.
This update also allows for better integration of other Google tools. For example, you could ask Gemini to “Put in directions to the nearest shopping centre, and put an event in your calendar in 20 minutes of what you need to buy when you get there.”
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As an extension of these improvements to the assistant, Google claims it is also easier than ever to report traffic incidents. Using phrases like “I see an accident” or “looks like it is flooding” will be converted by Gemini into accurate warnings for Google.
Landmark assistance
Sometimes, it isn’t actually clear where Google Maps is telling you to go. Whether that's because there are twenty random roads piled together, or you’re going too fast to judge the distance, Google is trying to make this clearer with more identifying features on the map.
Along with traffic lights and stop signs, Google will start showing landmarks like gas stations, restaurants and famous buildings on the map, along with these being included in the voice commands, like “turn right after the Thai Siam Restaurant” with it highlighted on the map.
Gemini achieves this by analyzing Google Maps’ Street View images. While this feature could be incredibly useful, it also has the potential to go wrong quite easily. It requires Gemini to quickly and accurately confirm that landmarks are still there, especially when it comes to restaurants, which can open and close quite quickly these days.
Beat the traffic
Currently, Google Maps will notify you of upcoming accidents or major disruptions to your route. This is normally done by a quick pop-up or, in some cases, just the colour of your arrival time getting darker.
With the Gemini update, Google Maps will proactively notify you of disruptions on the road ahead. This feature will first roll out to Android users in the US. There is no clear arrival date for other regions.
Get a clearer picture
Another feature that Google is announcing is the ability to get a clearer picture of destinations on the map. These could be the restaurant that you are currently heading to, or a random bar that you want to check out on the way.
If you see a pin, clicking on it allows you to have a conversation with Gemini about that destination. This can allow you to ask “what the vibe is like?” or “What is the most popular dish here?”
These are more conversational questions that Google Maps would have struggled to articulate before, but by searching through reviews, websites or Google Maps pages, Gemini can develop a better understanding.
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Alex is the AI editor at TomsGuide. Dialed into all things artificial intelligence in the world right now, he knows the best chatbots, the weirdest AI image generators, and the ins and outs of one of tech’s biggest topics.
Before joining the Tom’s Guide team, Alex worked for the brands TechRadar and BBC Science Focus.
He was highly commended in the Specialist Writer category at the BSME's 2023 and was part of a team to win best podcast at the BSME's 2025.
In his time as a journalist, he has covered the latest in AI and robotics, broadband deals, the potential for alien life, the science of being slapped, and just about everything in between.
When he’s not trying to wrap his head around the latest AI whitepaper, Alex pretends to be a capable runner, cook, and climber.
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