Waze has begun rolling out its long-awaited “Conversational Reporting” feature, allowing drivers to report road hazards entirely through voice interaction. First announced a year ago, the feature uses natural language processing — powered by Google’s Gemini AI model — to understand what drivers say and automatically categorize the report without requiring predefined commands or extra screen taps.
The idea behind Conversational Reporting is to make Waze’s crowdsourced hazard alerts faster and safer to use while driving. Instead of manually selecting icons or issuing rigid voice commands, users can now simply tap the report button and describe what they see. For instance, saying something like, “There’s a slowdown ahead” or “Debris on the right lane” prompts the AI to log the appropriate alert in real time.
Until recently, this functionality was available only to a small group of beta testers. Now, the feature is rolling out more broadly across regions, marking one of Waze’s most notable uses of AI integration to date. The move also replaces the app’s previous reliance on Google Assistant for hazard reporting, streamlining how users interact with Waze while on the road.
However, early reports suggest that the rollout hasn’t been entirely smooth. Some users have encountered persistent pop-up notifications prompting them to enable the feature, even after dismissing them. Others have reported issues with media playback, where audio stops during voice reporting and fails to resume automatically afterward. Waze has yet to comment on these bugs, though they are likely to be addressed in future updates.
Despite these early glitches, the addition of Conversational Reporting represents a meaningful step forward for Waze’s user experience. It aligns with a broader trend in Google’s ecosystem, where Gemini-powered tools are increasingly being embedded into existing apps to improve contextual understanding and user convenience.
The feature’s hands-free approach could also enhance driver safety, reducing the temptation to manually interact with the phone while reporting incidents. For a platform built on user-generated data, making that process simpler and more intuitive could strengthen the accuracy and timeliness of Waze’s traffic insights overall.