Google has announced a major global rollout of Opal, its no-code platform for building AI-powered mini-apps, expanding access from 15 countries to over 160. This development opens the tool to a broader audience, including entrepreneurs, marketers, and creators who want to automate workflows, analyze data, or build content-driven applications without technical expertise. Opal is now available publicly across most regions, with support for web-based deployment and integration with Google services such as Google Sheets.
Big news: We're expanding Opal, our no-code AI app builder, to 160+ countries!
— Google Labs (@GoogleLabs) November 6, 2025
From automating complex research to generating full marketing campaigns from one idea, builders are turning their ideas into mini-apps with natural language.
Show us what you build! See the details… pic.twitter.com/5oLCc84NUE
Opal lets users design complex, multi-step workflows that automate research, generate reports, and facilitate repeatable business tasks. The platform also offers templates tailored to marketing, allowing the creation of tools for producing blog posts, social content, or composite media assets. Its capabilities include interactive storytelling features, script generation, and audio voiceover synthesis. Compared to earlier internal tools, Opal emphasizes ease of use for non-developers and rapid prototyping, making it distinct from code-heavy solutions.

Industry analysts note that Opal's broad release intensifies competition with other no-code platforms but stands out due to its strong integration with Google’s AI models and cloud infrastructure. Early adopters have highlighted its versatility in quickly validating ideas and producing shareable mini-apps for education, travel planning, and content creation. Opal is also expected to get even more advanced Agent capabilities in the future.
Google is using Opal’s expansion to further its goal of democratizing AI app development, enabling a wider spectrum of users to participate in building and deploying custom solutions without programming skills.