Google Integrates Gemini Into Chrome To Enable Agentic Browsing

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Google has announced that it has begun integrating its Gemini artificial intelligence system directly into the Chrome browser as part of a wider effort to turn everyday web browsing into a more automated and assistant-led experience.

Why?

Chrome remains the world’s most widely used web browser, accounting for over 70 per cent of global desktop usage (StatCounter), and Google’s latest changes seem to reflect growing pressure from AI-focused rivals offering built-in assistants and automated task handling. For example, over the past year, browsers and browser features from Microsoft, OpenAI-backed projects, Perplexity and Opera have increasingly promoted AI agents as a way to reduce manual searching, form filling and comparison across multiple websites.

Therefore, rather than thinking about replacing Chrome or launching a separate AI browser, Google is now embedding Gemini directly into the existing product. The aim is to reshape how users interact with websites while preserving Chrome’s central role in daily computing and maintaining continuity for its vast installed user base.

Moving Gemini From A Floating Tool To A Built-In Side Panel

Google first added Gemini to Chrome in 2024, but its early implementation was limited. The assistant appeared in a floating window that sat apart from the main browsing experience and offered only limited contextual awareness. This latest update replaces that approach with a side panel that sits alongside web pages and can be opened across tabs.

According to Parisa Tabriz, Vice President of Chrome, the intention is to allow users to work across the web without losing context. In a Google blog post announcing the changes, she wrote that the new side panel “can help you save time and multitask without interruption” by letting users “keep your primary work open on one tab while using the side panel to handle a different task”.

This design allows Gemini to analyse the page currently being viewed, reference other open tabs, and respond to questions without forcing users to break their workflow. When several tabs originate from the same site or topic, such as product listings or reviews, Gemini can treat them as a related group, making it possible to summarise information or compare options across pages.

When and Where?

The update is rolling out now to Chrome users in the US on Windows, macOS and Chromebook Plus devices, extending availability beyond the platforms supported during earlier testing.

Built On Gemini 3 And Multimodal Capabilities

The new Chrome features are built on Gemini 3, which Google describes as its most capable AI model so far. Gemini is a multimodal system, meaning it can work with text, images and other structured inputs rather than relying solely on written prompts.

Google says this capability supports its aim of making Chrome more useful during complex tasks. In its announcement, the company described Gemini in Chrome as “an assistant that helps you find information and get things done on the web easier than ever before”, particularly when tasks involve multiple steps or different forms of content.

Multimodal understanding also enables Gemini to work directly with images viewed in the browser. For example, through integration with Google’s Nano Banana tool, users can modify images without downloading files or opening separate applications. Google appears to be positioning this as a practical feature for tasks such as visual planning or transforming information into graphics while remaining within the same browsing session.

Tighter Integration With Google Services

A key element of Google’s approach is deeper integration between Chrome and its wider ecosystem of services. Gemini in Chrome supports Connected Apps, including Gmail, Calendar, YouTube, Maps, Google Shopping and Google Flights.

With user permission, Gemini can reference information from these services to help complete tasks. In its announcement, Google highlighted examples such as travel planning, where Gemini can locate event details from an email, check flight options, and draft a message to colleagues about arrival times without requiring the user to move between applications.

Google has also confirmed that its Personal Intelligence feature will be brought to Chrome in the coming months. This feature allows Gemini to retain context from previous interactions and tailor responses over time. Tabriz stated that users remain in control, writing that people can opt in and choose whether to connect apps, with the ability to disconnect them at any time.

From Autofill To Agentic Browsing

The most substantial development is probably Google’s move towards agentic browsing, which refers to software systems capable of carrying out tasks across websites on a user’s behalf. For subscribers to Google AI Pro and AI Ultra in the United States, Chrome now includes a feature called auto browse.

Google is presenting auto browse as an extension of existing automation rather than a replacement for user involvement. In the blog post, Tabriz wrote, “For years, Chrome autofill has handled the small stuff, like automatically entering your address or credit card, to help you finish tasks faster.” She added that Chrome is now moving “beyond simple tasks to helping with agentic action”.

Auto browse is designed to handle multi-step workflows such as researching travel options, collecting documents, filling in online forms, requesting quotes, or managing subscriptions. Google says early testers have used it to schedule appointments, assemble tax documents, file expense reports and renew driving licences.

More advanced scenarios combine multimodal input and commerce. For example, Google describes cases where Gemini can identify items shown in an image, search for similar products online, add them to a shopping basket, apply discount codes and remain within a set budget. When sensitive actions are involved, such as signing in or completing purchases, auto browse pauses and asks the user to take control.

Google has stated that its AI models are not exposed to saved passwords or payment details, even when Chrome’s password manager is used to support these actions. The company says auto browse is designed to request explicit confirmation before completing actions such as purchases or social media posts.

Commercial Context And Industry Resistance

Google’s decision to deepen Gemini’s role in Chrome comes amid intensifying competition around AI-driven browsing and automation, for example Microsoft has integrated similar capabilities into Edge, while newer browsers have been designed from the outset around the use of AI agents.

There is also increasing interest in agent-led online commerce. For example, management consultancy McKinsey has projected that agentic commerce for business-to-consumer retail in the United States could reach $1 trillion by 2030. Google has indicated that Chrome will support its Universal Commerce Protocol, an open standard developed with companies including Shopify, Etsy, Wayfair and Target, which is intended to allow AI agents to carry out transactions in a structured and authorised way.

At the same time, some websites and platforms have begun limiting automated access or requiring explicit human review for transactions. Google appears to be positioning auto browse as a more controlled approach, with human confirmation built into sensitive steps, as it explores how agentic browsing can operate within existing legal and commercial frameworks.

What Does This Mean For Your Business?

Google’s decision to embed Gemini directly into Chrome seems to point to a future where the browser becomes an active participant in work rather than a passive gateway to information. For users, this could concentrate research, comparison and administrative tasks inside a single interface that already sits at the centre of daily digital activity. The immediate impact is likely to be incremental rather than transformational, with benefits most visible in time saved on repetitive or fragmented tasks, balanced against ongoing limits around accuracy, intent recognition and website compatibility.

For UK businesses, the changes could have practical implications across productivity, procurement and digital workflows. For example, tools such as auto browse could reduce the time staff spend on routine administration, travel planning, expense management and supplier research, particularly for small and medium sized organisations without dedicated support teams. At the same time, businesses that rely on web traffic, online forms or e-commerce will need to consider how agent-led browsing interacts with existing processes, security controls and customer journeys, especially as automated interactions become more common.

Website operators, retailers and platforms face a more complex picture, weighing potential efficiency gains against concerns over loss of control, while regulators and standards bodies are paying closer attention to how automated agents access data and complete transactions. Google’s emphasis on user confirmation, permissions and open standards reflects these pressures, while also highlighting that agentic browsing remains an evolving area. Chrome’s scale gives Google a strong position in shaping how this develops, although wider adoption and trust are likely to depend on how reliably these tools perform in real-world conditions rather than on their technical ambition alone.

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Mike Knight