Photo Credit: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Google has rolled out a major redesign of Gemini in Chrome, moving its AI assistant from a floating window into a side panel that stays visible across all browser tabs. The update, announced in late January 2026, represents one of the most substantial integrations of artificial intelligence into mainstream web browsing to date.

The redesigned interface positions Gemini on the right side of the browser window, where it remains accessible regardless of which tab users have opened. According to Google, the side panel allows users to multitask more effectively by keeping their main work visible while the AI handles separate tasks in parallel.

How the Gemini-Powered Side Panel Works

The side panel gives Gemini awareness of the user’s current browsing context. Users can ask the AI to summarize lengthy articles, compare product information across multiple open tabs, or explain complex material without leaving their current page. The feature operates on an opt-in basis, with users controlling which tabs share information with the assistant.

For users managing multiple tabs simultaneously, the side panel can consolidate information from several websites at once. Someone planning a trip, for example, could have the AI pull together flight details, hotel options, and activity recommendations from different sources into a single itinerary.

Beyond basic browsing assistance, there is also a deep integration of connected apps where Gemini in Chrome now connects with several Google services including Gmail, Calendar, YouTube, Maps, Google Shopping, and Google Flights. These integrations enable the AI to perform tasks that previously required users to switch between multiple applications.

Auto Browse for Complex Tasks

Google is also introducing Auto Browse, a feature limited to Google AI Pro and Ultra subscribers in the United States. This agentic capability handles multi-step web tasks autonomously, though it requires user confirmation for sensitive actions like purchases or social media posts.

Auto Browse can navigate websites independently to complete tasks such as comparing hotel and flight prices across different dates, filling out online forms, or searching for specific products within a budget. The feature uses Gemini 3’s multimodal capabilities to understand images and identify items based on visual information.

In practice, this means users can describe a task, such as finding decorations for a themed party from a reference photo, and Auto Browse will search for matching items, add them to a shopping cart, and apply available discount codes. The AI can access Google Password Manager with permission to handle tasks requiring account login.

Feature Availability 

The Gemini side panel is currently available for Chrome users on MacOS, Windows, and Chromebook Plus in the United States. Google has not specified a timeline for broader geographic availability, but indicated that business users will gain access through Google Workspace in the coming weeks.

Addressing Security and User Control Concerns

More importantly, Google has implemented what it describes as rigorous security standards for the new features, including defenses announced in December 2025 specifically designed for agentic browsing capabilities. For instance, Auto Browse is programmed to pause and request explicit user confirmation before completing sensitive actions.

This update arrives as browser makers increasingly compete on AI features. OpenAI launched its Atlas browser in October 2025 claiming to redefine smarter browsing, while Microsoft Edge and Opera have added their own AI assistants and automated browsing tools to their search engines.

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I’m Precious Amusat, Phronews’ Content Writer. I conduct in-depth research and write on the latest developments in the tech industry, including trends in big tech, startups, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and their global impacts. When I’m off the clock, you’ll find me cheering on women’s footy, curled up with a romance novel, or binge-watching crime thrillers.

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