Google Photos May Get Nano Banana AI , Claims New Report

Key Takeaways

  • Google Photos may soon integrate Gemini’s Nano Banana, a generative‑AI engine that lets users merge and remix multiple images with text prompts.
  • A hidden animation in the Android app hints at a new “Create” tool that mirrors Nano Banana’s capabilities, but the feature’s scope and availability are still unconfirmed.
  • Questions remain about global availability. Will it work outside the U.S.?

A new report suggests Google Photos may soon incorporate “Nano Banana,” the generative-AI model that drove Google’s Gemini app to top the U.S. App Store and outpace ChatGPT in global downloads.

Properly known as “Gemini 2.5 Flash Image,” Nano Banana provides fast, high-quality edits while maintaining consistency across successive generations. It can merge, manipulate and remix components from multiple source images in a single prompt, and now it appears these capabilities may soon be available in Google Photos.

A hidden GIF animation in the newest Android Photos app, discovered by well-known app investigator AssembleDebug for Android Authority, shows an unreleased “Create” tool turning a regular selfie image into a variety of different images, including famous memes. Nano Banana isn’t named explicitly, but these transformations are precisely the sort of results that propelled Nano Banana to viral success.

Google’s recent rollout of “conversational editing,” now available beyond the Pixel 10 smartphone series, lets users edit photos using voice or text commands. However, what sets this new Create tool apart is its ability to pull a subject from one image and place it into another. This multi-image operation mirrors one of Nano Banana’s core strengths, beyond the scope of the current Google Photos editor.

While this short animation certainly hints at Nano Banana capabilities, it doesn’t show us whether the Create tool will grant full access to Nano Banana or perhaps merely a simplified subset of its functions aimed at generating quick, impactful creations. We’ll have to wait and see how the feature develops in future versions of the app.

Google Photos Nano Banana: Possible Confusion

As an unreleased feature, the new “Create” tool is subject to change before release, and I expect some alterations will need to be made. Currently, the new Create tool shares the same name as the Create tab in which it resides, which may cause some confusion. Furthermore, it’s unclear how the new Create tool might coexist with the current photo editor, which offers many overlapping capabilities with current implementations of Nano Banana. If the two remain separate tools, I can foresee situations where users will be forced to go back and forth between the two multiple times to make use of all available editing tools.

Google Photos Nano Banana: Available Outside The U.S.?

While Nano Banana is available globally, wherever Google’s Gemini app is available, that may not be the case for the new Create tool as the Create tab in which it resides is currently available only in the U.S. It’s possible that Google will provide an alternative way to access the feature for those without the Create tab, but unless this happens, international users may have to wait until Google starts a broader rollout of its geo-locked AI features. This could be a significant source of frustration, especially as Nano Banana is already accessible to most.

Is Google Photos Becoming an AI Platform?

Gemini 2.5’s Nano Banana has become a massive hit, but does it really belong in Google Photos? The Create tab already offers powerful generative AI features that blur the line between a photo app and an AI editor/generator. Adding Nano Banana could tip the balance too far, threatening the app’s core function as a home for reliving and sharing authentic memories.

ForbesNo Pixel 10 Needed: Google Photos’ Conversational Editing Comes To All Android DevicesForbesGoogle Photos Tests Much-Needed Design Update

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