Google signals plans to introduce ads into Gemini chatbot

07:40
By: Dakir Madiha
Google signals plans to introduce ads into Gemini chatbot

Google has given its clearest indication yet that advertising will be integrated into its Gemini chatbot, marking a shift in its public stance on monetizing generative AI products. During its first quarter 2026 earnings call, chief business officer Philipp Schindler told analysts that advertising formats already proving effective in AI-powered search would likely extend to the Gemini application.

The statement represents a notable change after months of denials. Schindler said Google’s advertising teams are currently focused on expanding inventory within AI-driven search features and AI-generated summaries. He added that advertising has historically been central to scaling products to billions of users, signaling that Gemini could follow the same model as the company’s core search business.

The shift follows a series of earlier contradictions. In late 2025, reports suggested Google had informed advertisers about plans to introduce ads into Gemini by 2026, which the company publicly rejected at the time. Executives later maintained that no such plans existed. However, in early 2026, senior leadership began softening that position, acknowledging that advertising in Gemini could not be ruled out and that lessons from AI search monetization would likely apply.

The comments came alongside strong financial results. Alphabet reported revenue of $109.9 billion for the first quarter of 2026, up 22 percent year on year, while net income nearly doubled to $62.6 billion. Advertising revenue from search and related services rose 19 percent, driven in part by AI systems that enable Google to monetize queries it previously could not interpret. The company indicated that this opens additional growth potential beyond the roughly 20 percent of searches currently linked to ads.

Google is also increasing its capital expenditure plans for 2026 to between $180 billion and $190 billion, underscoring the scale of its investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure. These investments support the expansion of AI capabilities across its ecosystem, including search, cloud, and conversational tools.

For now, Gemini remains ad-free, with revenue generated through subscriptions and API access. However, Schindler’s remarks suggest that this model may evolve. His emphasis on current monetization strategies implies that advertising integration is a matter of timing rather than possibility, as Google continues aligning its AI products with its broader revenue model.



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