Google Brings Canvas to AI Mode for All US Users
Google has extended the capabilities of the AI-based search experience by introducing Gemini’s Canvas feature in AI mode to all users in the United States. The company stated through the update that the workspace would now be broadly available in English, removing the earlier access from the Google Labs experiment and ensuring the tool is available in the core Search Interface.
Canvas in AI mode is built to help users organize information, plan projects, conduct deeper research, and create interactive tools, all without leaving Google Search. By installing this feature in AI Mode, Google aims to shift the search experience from simply fetching information to allowing users to actively create and refine content.
The feature allows users to handle creative writing tasks, help draft documents, and even generate simple apps or games from a plain-language description. Instead of navigating across multiple tabs or applications, users can start a project inside Search and continue refining it through a dedicated side panel powered by Gemini.
Users can access these options via the Canvas option in the tool menu, indicated by a “+” icon in AI Mode, and then describe what they want to build or create.
As soon as the prompt is entered, Canvas opens the side panel and fetches information from the web and Google’s knowledge graph to generate a working prototype. From there, the workspace enables users to test and optimize code using conventional prompts powered by AI.
The blog post even highlighted several use cases for Canvas, including crafting class notes and organizing research into structured formats. In several cases, users can turn reports into other outputs, such as web pages, quizzes, or audio summaries.
Users can even explain the entire idea for an app or game, and Gemini will generate code to develop a prototype. The tool enables users to iterate on the project by adjusting functionality, reviewing the generated code, or refining the design through follow-up prompts.
Canvas first appeared in Gemini before being introduced to AI Mode in Search last year, where it was primarily used for studying and trip planning. The latest expansion brings improved coding and document drafting capabilities, making the feature considerably more versatile.
Google AI Pro and AI Ultra subscribers who already use Gemini will also have access to Canvas with Gemini 3 and a 1-million-token context window for handling more complex projects. By bringing Canvas into AI Mode in Search, Google aims to reach a broader audience.
That reach is undoubtedly Google’s biggest competitive edge. With billions of people using Google Search every day, integrating Canvas into AI Mode gives the company a distribution advantage that standalone AI products may struggle to match.
Canvas competes with similar features from OpenAI and Anthropic. ChatGPT’s Canvas triggers automatically based on the user’s query, while Google’s and Anthropic’s Claude require the user to initiate the feature more directly. Both tools offer help with writing and project creation, though their approaches differ in interaction design.
The broader Canvas rollout indicates that Google is not treating AI assistants as separate products, but it is integrating generative capabilities into Search itself, turning it into a platform for both discovery and creation.