Google is giving Chrome its biggest overhaul in more than a decade, embedding its Gemini artificial-intelligence system into the browser to make AI a default part of how people search, shop and navigate online.
The move, detailed in two Thursday (Sept. 18) company blog posts, underscores Google’s effort to turn Chrome from a gateway to the web into a platform for AI-driven productivity and commerce.
The immediate updates center on making AI accessible in everyday browsing. A new Gemini button on desktop Chrome lets users summarize or compare content across multiple tabs. The browser’s omnibox will support “AI Mode” searches, producing contextual answers in a side panel, while users can also prompt Chrome to “ask about this page” to generate clarifications or overviews.
Google is also framing AI as a new security layer. Chrome’s password manager will soon offer one-click resets for compromised credentials, and Gemini Nano will detect scams such as fake virus warnings and fraudulent sweepstakes. Integration with services like YouTube, Calendar and Maps means Gemini can pull context from across a user’s Google ecosystem without requiring extra clicks.
The more ambitious shift comes later this year. Chrome will add agentic capabilities, allowing Gemini to handle tasks on behalf of users, from booking appointments to completing online orders. To make these interactions safer, the company is introducing an Agent Payments Protocol designed to standardize how AI agents initiate purchases, with built-in auditability and consumer protections.
As part of the rollout, Google also expanded its partnership with PayPal, enabling Gemini agents to execute branded checkouts directly within Chrome. The move reflects Google’s intent to shape not only how users browse but also how they transact, positioning Chrome as a platform for automated commerce.
Why It MattersFor Google, the strategy is about ensuring Chrome remains central in an AI-first internet. By embedding Gemini across tabs, search and commerce, Chrome becomes more than a browser; it becomes an environment where AI mediates actions and reduces friction. That creates stronger ties to Google’s broader ecosystem and raises switching costs for users.
Competitors are circling the same opportunity. Microsoft brought Copilot deeper into its Edge browser, while OpenAI and Anthropic have experimented with AI agents that control the browser directly.
Yet, Google’s advantage lies in scale. Chrome commands more than half the global browser market, giving Gemini’s agentic features a distribution rivals can’t match. If users grow accustomed to AI being the default mode of browsing, Chrome could become the de facto standard for how agentic computing takes shape, leapfrogging smaller competitors that remain gated behind premium subscriptions or limited pilots.
The risks are considerable. Running agentic systems at scale is expensive, prone to errors and likely to attract regulatory scrutiny, especially in payments. However, Google’s bet is that browsers will evolve from passive viewers of the web to active participants in it, with AI as the driver.
If that vision holds, Chrome won’t just keep pace with the AI transition. It could be the place where billions of people experience it first.
For all PYMNTS AI coverage, subscribe to the daily AI Newsletter.
The post Google Turns Browser Into AI Assistant With Gemini appeared first on PYMNTS.com.