Google launches three AI tools that phone retailers, track deals, and complete checkout automatically. They roll out now in the U.S., targeting holiday shoppers who want machines to handle research, inventory checks, and purchases—saving hours during the busiest retail season.

What's new: Google updates AI Mode—its conversational search layer powered by Gemini models—to understand natural requests. Type "light sweater for warm weather, works with jeans and dresses." The system factors in style, versatility, and climate without explicit prompts.

Results appear as shoppable cards with prices, reviews, and stock status. AI Mode generates comparison tables on demand. The Gemini mobile app now displays product listings, price comparisons across retailers, and direct purchase links in one view.
Google calls stores for you: Search for "near me" products in electronics, toys, health, or beauty. A "Let Google Call" button appears. Specify brand and price range.

Google's AI—powered by Duplex, the voice system introduced in 2018—phones local stores to check inventory, confirm pricing, and ask about promotions. Results arrive via email or text.
Agentic checkout arrives: Set a price alert using the Track Price tool. When conditions are met, a notification appears with a "Buy for me" button. Click it. Confirm payment, address, and shipping.

An AI agent visits the merchant's site, verifies the price, and completes the purchase on your behalf. First previewed at Google I/O 2024, agentic checkout now works on Search and AI Mode with select U.S. merchants: Wayfair, Chewy, Quince, and some Shopify stores. More retailers join soon.
Why it matters: This shifts AI from advisor to actor. A parent in Denver sets an alert for a sold-out toy. AI buys it at 2 a.m. when the price drops—no alarm needed.

Think of it as a personal shopper that never sleeps. Black Friday deals at 3 a.m., no crowds required. You gain hours. You lose a small piece of control. That trade-off defines AI's next chapter.
What to watch: Will Americans trust AI with their credit cards? Early adopters say yes. Privacy advocates say wait. The answer shapes how we shop for the next decade.
Watch whether merchants expand support—and what happens when the agent makes a mistake.

