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Google’s AI Mode Expands to Hindi, Japanese & More Languages

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

Google Expands AI Mode ⁤to Five New Languages, Bringing AI-Powered Search to‍ Millions ‌More

MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA – november 1, 2025 – Google is​ substantially expanding the reach of its AI Mode, adding support for Hindi, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, adn Brazilian Portuguese. The update, ​announced today, breaks the feature’s six-month limitation to ⁤English⁤ and brings AI-powered search capabilities to⁢ users in a wider range of global markets.

Launched initially as an experiment for Google⁢ One ⁤AI Premium subscribers in March, AI Mode represents Google’s direct response to ‍emerging AI search platforms like Perplexity and OpenAI’s ChatGPT Search. The feature⁢ leverages a customized version of Gemini ‍2.5, offering multimodal and​ reasoning capabilities⁤ to provide more⁤ extensive answers to complex queries.

The ‌expansion follows a rollout‌ to ⁤180 new ‍markets​ in English last month, after initial availability in the ‌U.S., 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,” stated Hema Budaraju,⁤ VP of Product Management at Google Search, in a blog post.

Google has also been introducing agentic features within AI Mode, beginning with⁤ restaurant reservation finding in August, with plans to add support for local service appointments and event ticket bookings. These⁣ advanced capabilities are currently limited to Google AI ​Ultra subscribers in⁤ the U.S. and‍ are accessible through the “Agentic capabilities in AI Mode” experiment in Labs, costing $249.99⁣ per month.

Currently accessible via a dedicated tab on search‍ results⁣ pages and a button in ⁤the search bar, Google appears to be moving towards making​ AI ⁤Mode the ‍default search experience‍ “soon,” ⁤according to Logan Kilpatrick, group ⁣product manager at Google DeepMind.

The rollout of ‍Google’s AI‍ features, including AI Mode ⁤and⁢ AI Overviews, has faced scrutiny regarding‌ potential impacts on search ‍clicks, though Google has denied claims that these​ features are negatively affecting website⁢ traffic.

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