Google Makes Gemini Personal Intelligence Free for All US Users


TL;DR

  • Free Access: Google is making its Personal Intelligence feature available to all free US Gemini users, less than two months after its paid-only launch in January 2026.
  • What It Does: Personal Intelligence connects Gemini to a user’s Gmail, Google Docs, and Search history to deliver personalized answers based on their own data.
  • Privacy Controls: The feature is strictly opt-in, requiring manual permission grants, though prompts sent to Google’s servers may include details drawn from connected apps.
  • US Only: The expansion is currently limited to US users with personal Google accounts, with no international rollout schedule confirmed.

Google is making its Personal Intelligence feature free for all US Gemini users, giving them an AI assistant that draws on their Gmail, Google Docs, and Search history to deliver personalized answers. Originally launched in January 2026 as a perk reserved for paid subscribers, Personal Intelligence is transitioning to free access less than two months after its debut.

How Personal Intelligence Works

Personal Intelligence links Gemini to users’ Gmail, Google Docs, and Search history to tailor responses. Rather than treating every query as if it comes from a stranger, it can surface flight details from email confirmations, summarize documents a user was editing, or reference past search activity to provide contextual answers. A user planning a vacation, for instance, could ask Gemini to check hotel confirmations in Gmail and recall past searches about the destination without restating context in every prompt.

Building on that, Google is expanding the feature through AI Mode in Search, with Gemini app and Chrome integrations coming to free users soon. To activate it, users navigate to their Search profile, tap Search personalization, select Connected Content Apps, and choose “Connect Workspace and Google Photos.”

 

As a result, two people entering the same query may now receive different outcomes. According to Search Engine Journal, users with connected Gmail or other Google services receive different AI Mode results compared to those without. Queries like “When’s my next flight?” return answers drawn from a user’s own data rather than generic web results.

In contrast, that level of integration goes beyond what rivals currently offer. ChatGPT’s memory features retain conversation context but cannot pull from a user’s email inbox or document library, while Apple has also promised similar personalization through Siri but has faced repeated delays in delivering it. By tapping into services that billions of people already use daily, Google is leveraging its ecosystem breadth to create AI personalization that competitors cannot easily replicate.