Gemini mobile app redesign leaks show upcoming look ahead of I/O

Fresh Gemini iOS redesign screenshots show translucent panels, animated gradients, and reworked menus, reflecting iOS 26 style!

· 2 min read
Gemini

Fresh screenshots of an unreleased Gemini iOS redesign began circulating on Reddit over the past day after a small batch of users were apparently rolled into the experiment ahead of schedule. The new look leans heavily on iOS 26's Liquid Glass language, with translucent panels, frosted input bars, and animated multicolor gradients that pulse softly behind the chat surface. The homepage now opens with a centered "Hi [name], what's on your mind?" greeting, the model picker has returned to a top-left dropdown, and the icon set has been redrawn in thinner, rounded outlines.

A reworked bottom sheet replaces the old cluttered attachment tray, surfacing photo and camera tiles at the top and listing tools such as image and video generation, Canvas, Deep Research, and Guided Learning underneath, each with a short description. The account switcher has also moved down to the foot of the navigation drawer, a notable break from Google's usual first-party app conventions.

A parallel Android refresh is in development too, though it follows Material 3 Expressive rather than Liquid Glass, so the two platforms will look related yet distinct. Reactions across social media have skewed strongly positive, with many users calling the overhaul long overdue. Several have noted that the layout and rhythm now resemble ChatGPT's interface, which could lower the friction for anyone considering a switch, since a familiar visual grammar tends to make migration feel smaller than it actually is.

The timing points squarely at Google I/O on May 19 and 20, where the company is expected to bundle the redesign with announcements covering:

  1. A new advanced agent
  2. Proactive assistant
  3. The next wave of models

If those land together, the visual refresh will read less like a coat of paint and more like the front end for a broader shift toward an agent-centric Gemini, where animated surfaces and reorganized tool menus exist to host capabilities the current chat-first layout was never built for.

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