Google appears to be preparing a deeper integration of its Nano Banana image generator directly into the Google Search app, signaling a shift toward making AI-driven visuals a routine part of everyday search. Hints uncovered through an APK teardown point to a new Create images option tucked under the plus icon in the Google app’s search bar. If rolled out broadly, users would no longer need to switch to a standalone tool—image generation would sit alongside regular search, turning the app into a hybrid of lookup engine and creative workspace.
The feature seems designed for quick, informal visual tasks: drafting a poster idea, mocking up a meme, assembling a simple layout, or generating illustrative art while researching a topic. Integrating Nano Banana into search also suggests Google is continuing to tie its image tools more closely to the broader Gemini ecosystem. In practical terms, that could mean the tool draws on context like weather, location, or search history to shape outputs, allowing users to blend text prompts with surrounding real-world data.
If Google proceeds with this approach, Nano Banana’s capabilities could become standard across many of the company’s services. The generator already supports photorealistic output and detailed editing adjustments, and the Nano Banana Pro update strengthened resolution, text rendering, lighting control, and layout precision. Bringing these improvements into core search—rather than confining them to a separate app—would push image creation into the same workflow people already use for everyday queries.

This isn’t the only place where Google is expanding Nano Banana’s reach. It has surfaced in NotebookLM for visual summaries, appears in updated tools for Google Messages, and now sits adjacent to features like Circle to Search’s improved follow-up responses. The trend indicates a broader internal strategy: instead of treating image generation as a niche capability, Google is threading it through the platforms people open dozens of times a day.
Should the integration ship widely, Google Search may evolve from a purely informational interface into one that offers both reference material and instant visual generation without leaving the page. The shift reflects a larger industry pattern in which search, creativity, and AI utilities are blending into a single interaction loop—one where users can research an idea and immediately produce a visual interpretation in the same tap sequence. Whether this becomes a staple feature or remains an experimental test will depend on how seamlessly Nano Banana fits into the search experience, and whether users see practical value in generating images as naturally as typing a query.

