Here Are All the New AI-Powered Smart Home Features Google Just Announced

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On Wednesday, Google officially announced a number of smart home initiatives. Alongside new devices—including Nest cameras, doorbells, and a new Google Home Speaker—the company rolled out a redesigned Google Home app. As you might expect in 2025, Google’s new smart home strategy is powered by the company’s AI, Gemini, with a new branding to boot: Gemini for Home.

The company is making a lot of claims for how its next-generation tech will improve your smart home. We’ll need to wait for the reviewers to put Gemini and the new Google Home app through their paces, not to mention all of Google’s new devices, but until then, we can take a peek at the future Google is selling us on:

Gemini for Home


Credit: Google

Google Assistant is nothing new, but even Google seems to think there’s been room for improvement. The company says the experience was “functional, not intuitive or natural,” which seems to be informing Google’s newest smart home assistant: Gemini for Home.

As you might expect, Gemini is replacing Google Assistant across all Google smart home products. The company’s argument here is that the new experience is much more natural than before: Previously, you might have needed to ensure your commands were succinct and to the point for the assistant to understand them. Going forward, Google says you can take advantage of the AI’s contextual awareness for more casual requests.

If you’re asking for help fixing your dishwasher, for example, you don’t need to preface each request with the problem at hand. You can begin with a question like “Hey Google, my dishwasher is having trouble draining. Where should I start?” If it suggests you check the filter, you don’t need to say “Hey Google, I’m trying to get my dishwasher to drain, but the filter seems fine. What’s the next step?” Instead, you can simply follow up with “Hey Google, the filter seems fine. What’s next?” Google says Gemini will understand the context, and continue to help.

If you want to bypass the the constant “Hey Googles,” you can say “Hey Google, let’s chat.” This kicks on Gemini Live, the AI’s voice mode, which let’s you have a back and forth with Gemini.

The company says you can do the same when asking questions about things like songs and movies. If you want to look up a song from a movie, but you don’t remember the name of either, you can share vague details about the movie and Gemini supposedly can put the pieces together.

Perhaps most importantly for the smart home itself, Google says Gemini can handle more complex requests. For example, you can ask it to turn off all lights except for a specific room, or trust that the AI will understand the context of the room you’re asking about, e.g., “Can you turn on the lights by the oven” will mean turning on the lights in the kitchen. My favorite of Google’s promised features, however, is that you can ask Gemini to add items to your grocery lists from recipes, rather than individual items. You can simply request a shopping list for Pad Thai, and, according to Google, Gemini will add all the ingredients necessary to your shopping list.

Gemini with smart cameras


Credit: Google

Google says Gemini for Home can also upgrade smart cameras connected to Google Home. The company argues that most smart camera alerts are “low context,” pinging you with things like “motion detected” or “person detected,” but leaving the rest on you to figure out what’s really going on.

With Gemini for Home, Google says it is using AI to make your smart camera experience more contextual. Alerts will offer a “full narrative of what’s happening,” so you can learn from the notification itself whether you have a USPS delivery, or simply a shadow moving in front of the camera. Gemini will also organize and summarize all of the day’s video clips—you can choose whether to review all the videos taken, or simply scan the summary for any updates the AI thought important. Google says you can ask Gemini questions about your clips, as well.

Speaking of which, you can ask Gemini to find specific video clips using natural language. Google says you can ask questions like “When did the kids get home,” or “Did I leave the car door open today?”

The new Google Home app


Credit: Google

Tying all these updates together is the overhauled Google Home app, which reportedly has over 100 new features and performance improvements. Google says there were three goals in mind with this particular update: “Make it faster, more reliable, and complete.”

To that first point, the app should perform quite well, if the company is to be believed. Google claims its new Home app is over 70% faster on some Android devices than before, with crashes down by almost 80%, while smart camera live views supposedly load 30% faster with 40% fewer playback failures.

The new design comes with three main tabs: There’s the Home tab, which is where you see all of the controls for your smart home devices. Within this tab, there are swipeable menus for things like Favorites and devices. Next, there’s the Activity tab, which contains your home’s activity history. You can see when a routine was started, when motion was detected on a camera, and when a light was turned off. Finally, there’s the Automations tab: You can see which automations are coming up, access your entire automations collection, and create new automations as well.

Google has also integrated “the best” of the Nest app into the new Home app. While the dedicated Nest app is still available, Google clearly intends for Nest functionality to live here long-term. That includes support for Nest Thermostats from 2015 on, as well as Nest Protect smoke and CO emergency alerts and Nest x Yale Lock passcode management. Google says the experience of controlling previous Nest devices is also enhanced in the new app, with higher frame rates and faster loading times.

Finally, there’s “Ask Home,” a new Gemini-powered feature that aims to make it easy to find any element of your smart home. For example, Google says you can type things like “lights” or “living room” to find deices and automations related to those queries. You can look up clips from your smart cameras, stack multiple smart home commands together, or create an automation with natural language.

Google says all of these changes are rolling out today, Wednesday, Oct. 1 around the globe.

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