
Google is pushing deeper into AI-powered software development with new tools that promise to turn plain-language ideas into working Android apps in minutes all from a web browser.
Unveiled at Google I/O 2026, the latest update to Google AI Studio adds native Android app creation, shrinking what is typically weeks of setup and coding into a much shorter, guided workflow. The move extends Google’s earlier Gemini-powered coding features in the desktop version of Android Studio and aims to make Android app development accessible to both professional developers and non-technical creators.
The new capabilities live inside Google AI Studio, a web-based environment that now supports building native Android apps without installing traditional development tools. Google positions the feature as useful for experienced developers who want to prototype quickly, as well as for first-time app creators who have never written code.
Apps generated through AI Studio are built using Kotlin and Jetpack Compose, Google’s modern toolkit for Android user interfaces. The system also supports integration with hardware sensors such as GPS, Bluetooth, and NFC, enabling location-aware utilities, simple social apps, and other hardware-enabled or AI-powered experiences.
At this stage, Google says these apps are primarily intended for personal use. The ability to publish apps more broadly for family and friends is on the roadmap, rather than available today.
To help users see what they are building as they go, AI Studio includes an embedded Android Emulator that runs directly in the browser. Creators can interact with their app in real time during development. When they are ready to move beyond the emulator, they can install the app on a physical Android phone over USB using an integrated Android Debug Bridge (adb) connection.
Google’s push also ramps up competition with a growing field of AI-assisted coding and app-building tools, including platforms like Cursor, Replit, Lovable, and Claude Code. Unlike many of those, Google is tying app creation directly into the Android development and distribution stack.
For users who want to take a project further than a personal prototype, Google AI Studio can handle several steps that usually require manual setup. It can automatically create the app’s Play Store record, package the app bundle, and upload it to an internal testing track in Google Play Console. That allows the app to be updated and iterated on while test versions are pushed to devices.
Developers or advanced users who want full control can export the project. AI Studio supports downloading the app as a zip file, which can then be sent to a GitHub repository and opened in the desktop Android Studio environment for more traditional development.
Google says it plans to expand the ecosystem around these AI-generated apps. Future updates are expected to let creators publish apps for family and friends and to integrate Firebase services such as Firestore, Firebase Auth, Firebase App Check, and related tooling. That would open the door to more sophisticated apps that rely on cloud data, authentication, and security checks, while still starting from an AI-guided workflow.
Longer term, Google imagines an Android landscape where users increasingly discover apps through their own networks rather than only through large public app storefronts, with lightweight, AI-generated apps circulating among friends and communities.
Alongside development tools, Google is also changing how users find apps. Consumers will be able to turn to Gemini AI to identify the apps they need, both on Google Play and across the web, which could expand discovery pathways for developers who embrace the new tools.
Gemini and “Ask Play” reshape Android app discovery
The app creation updates arrive as Google infuses AI more deeply into the Android experience. A new “Ask Play” overlay in the Play Store will let users discover apps by having natural conversations with an AI assistant instead of relying solely on typing queries or browsing lists.
Beyond the Play Store itself, apps will begin surfacing inside conversations with Google’s Gemini virtual assistant. As Gemini rolls out across the web and Android over the coming weeks, developers’ apps can be recommended directly in response to user prompts, potentially putting them in front of millions of users.
Later this year, Gemini is also set to highlight more media content: over 450,000 movies and TV shows, along with information on where to livestream sports. Those answers can link users directly from their queries to Android apps that host or distribute that content, providing another route for app discovery and engagement.
The timing of the announcement suggests Google sees native Android app generation in AI Studio as one of its more significant Android-related moves. The company previewed several Android updates before I/O but held back the news about AI-driven app creation for the opening of its annual developer conference, tying it directly to this year’s broader theme of using AI in practical, product-focused ways across search, productivity, mobile apps, and more.
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