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Google Introduces AI Mode Info Agents for Ultra Subscribers

Photo of David Park David Park June 12, 2026 · 4 min read

These agents arrived just three weeks after the Google I/O announcement, and expansion to other user tiers is on the way this summer.

Information agents—now exclusive to Google AI Ultra subscribers—act like always-on digital assistants built directly into the new Search interface. Searchenginejournal explains that these agents monitor customizable topics for each user, continuously scanning blogs, major news outlets, and even social feeds for the latest. Because users can now ask more than one question at a time, AI Mode turns static queries into persistent, context-aware monitoring—sending updates and links right to the Search results as new info surfaces.


Timeline: Feature Launches and Expansion Plans

The feature’s rollout began at Google I/O in May 2026, where the company committed to a summer phased deployment for both Pro and Ultra subscribers. Blog.google details how Google prioritized its highest-tier Ultra members as the starting point, ensuring information agents were available across all AI Mode markets and languages by mid-June.


How The Launch Compares to the I/O Plan

Google’s May I/O keynote outlined a vision for agent-driven Search—marketing this upgrade as the biggest leap for its core product in over 25 years. The roadmap aimed to introduce information agents to Pro and Ultra subscribers during the summer, eventually reaching all U.S.

This multi-tier release—mirroring approaches from previous AI milestones—emphasizes starting with premium subscribers. Their early feedback guides development, while the rest of the world watches and waits.


Why the Ultra Rollout Matters

The Ultra-only access to information agents gives Google a focused group for feedback and refinement before opening things up to millions of new users. Searchenginejournal points out: these early Ultra testers act as a live testbed—surfacing edge cases and usability quirks that directly influence future iterations. Not surprisingly, the Ultra crowd relies heavily on Gemini 3.5 Flash and Gemini Omni features within AI Mode’s ecosystem, driving higher engagement and more technical insights.

Stein called the Ultra release the “first group” and reiterated that invitations will expand later in the summer—so ongoing access is clearly tied to stability and community response.


Google’s information agents aren’t just there to fetch or summarize articles. Blog.google notes they’re evolving fast, integrating even deeper with Search. New capabilities like agentic booking and the Daily Brief are rolling out during summer 2026. For example—the Daily Brief pushes tailored updates to users via the Gemini app, starting with premium subscribers and then extending to all U.S.

Support from Gemini 3.5 Flash and Omni AI enables these agents to process and generate content across text, video, and multi-modal formats.

These upgrades coincide with Google’s ongoing improvements to its generative AI backbone..google, the new agent integration marks a fundamental shift: Search now moves beyond old page-rank results into a world of curated, automatically updating threads—personalized for each user and visible directly inside the Search box.


What Comes Next: From Ultra to Everyone

Looking forward, Google’s communicated plans indicate that core agentic features will quickly become available to a wider audience as soon as the Ultra release proves stable. Blog.google also points out that new generative UI tie-ins for Search will roll out free for every user this summer in all supported regions and languages.

Given Google’s rapid track record—such as launching Gemini Daily Brief to U.S. So with agents steadily moving from Ultra to Pro tiers, it looks like users can expect a wave of regular Search enhancements through late 2026. That’ll raise the bar for what’s possible in casual queries and long-term research alike.


Industry Impact and Competitive Response

This Ultra subscriber release cements Google’s edge as the first mover in mainstream search assistants—and it’s putting big pressure on rivals, especially Microsoft, to accelerate their agent-powered interfaces. According to Androidpolice, even Bing is rushing out grounding APIs and agent plugins as Google’s cross-platform reach expands.

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David Park

Analytics and Measurement Lead

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David Park is the Analytics and Measurement Lead at AdvantageBizMarketing with 9 years of experience in data-driven SEO. He holds an MS in Statistics from UC Berkeley and previously worked as a data scientist at Google, where he contributed to search quality measurement frameworks. David specializes in SEO attribution modeling, log file analysis, and building custom reporting dashboards that connect organic search to revenue. He is a certified Google Analytics 4 expert and has published research on click-through rate modeling in peer-reviewed marketing journals.

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