- Google’s new flight offers use AI to find trips based on conversation requests
- Use Gemini 2.5 to interpret feelings and high -time sections to compile offers
- Flight agreements are being implemented in Beta in the United States, Canada and India
Google is using Gemini AI to reinvent the experience of the travel agent, turning the conversations into plane tickets. The new product of flight offers, which is now in beta, adds Chat from Ia to Google Flights users looking for a good business or who are still trying to decide where and when they want to travel.
Instead of playing with the destination drop -down menus and the sliding controls of the departure time, you can simply write the type of trip you want to do and anything else that can be important for you when traveling. Instead of an airport code and an appointment, you can choose a season, the location atmosphere and how it feels on very early flights. Gemini will then scan the real -time prices of hundreds of airlines and offer updated options adapted to your application.
This is not a replacement for traditional Google flights. That family grid of sliding dates and controls is still alive and well. But Google believes that flight offers are perfect for the flexible traveler (or simply undecided). Think about it as a friend who is not only really good to find travel offers, but really loves to find them for friends.
For example, when I wrote “I want to go where I can see the Boreal Aurora in December for a week.” He had suggestions for Alaska, Iceland and Norway with some good offers in December. When I requested “somewhere with mountains and good food in spring”, I saw flights from March to June to Denver, Munich, Auckland and more.
Fletting ai
The more casual your phrase is, the more you have to work. AI will try to match not only the location but the spirit of your application. Gemini 2.5 has been behind the curtain in many recent Google products, but this is one of the first times that are used in this way.
It also marks one of Google’s clearest movements so far to take AI to a very public and popular space, finding bargains on flights. The airline tickets are perfect to attract people to try AI, since buying them is a common, but not everyday experience, and expensive enough for people to make an effort to find a good treatment without being so expensive that people would not trust AI to help them when it is still possible for technology to fail.
Flight offers are still learning, and you may not always choose the perfect itinerary. But if people help to discover that, for example, flights to Oaxaca in January are very cheap and lunar changes life, that is a victory.