Google has made one of Gemini’s most interesting AI tricks a lot easier to try. The company is rolling out its personalized image generation feature to eligible U.S. users for free, removing a paywall that previously kept it exclusive to Gemini’s paid tiers.

Powered by Google’s Nano Banana image model, the feature does more than generate pretty pictures; it taps into Gemini’s understanding of you, making AI-generated images feel surprisingly personal.

Let Gemini connect the dots

Normally, getting an AI image to match your personality means stuffing your prompt with details about your hobbies, favorite foods, pets, or travel habits. Gemini now skips much of that. If you opt into Personal Intelligence, Gemini can draw on context from connected Google services, such as Gmail, Google Photos, YouTube, and Search, to better understand your interests. Instead of painstakingly listing everything you love, you can simply ask it to create an illustration of “me and my favorite things,” and it’ll fill in the blanks using what it already knows about you.

The feature can even pull photos from your Google Photos library, so you don’t have to upload reference images every time you want AI artwork that actually resembles you. Of course, this level of personalization isn’t automatic. Personal Intelligence is entirely opt-in, and Google lets you choose which services Gemini can access. Once enabled, it’s used by default for prompts, though a new toggle in the Tools menu lets you switch it off whenever you’d rather keep things generic.

This is bigger than a freebie

This rollout is another sign that Google wants Gemini to evolve from a chatbot into a digital assistant that genuinely knows its user. Personal Intelligence first became widely available in the U.S. earlier this year before expanding to India and Japan, and personalized image generation feels like the next logical step.

It also fits into Google’s broader Gemini roadmap. Recent announcements include a Daily Brief feature, a refreshed app experience, access to its latest AI video capabilities, and an upcoming personal AI agent called Gemini Spark. With Gemini already crossing the 750-million monthly active user mark, Google clearly isn’t slowing down. Making one of its more impressive AI image features free could be another smart way to convince curious users that Gemini is worth keeping around — even after the novelty of AI chatbots wears off.

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