Alphabet and Google CEO Sundar Pichai shared new milestones for the company’s consumer-facing AI products during Google’s Q2 2025 earnings call, highlighting strong growth across tools like AI Overviews, Gemini, and AI Mode.
The AI Overviews feature, an AI-powered summary tool integrated into Google Search and now available in 200 countries and territories has reached 2 billion monthly users, a significant jump from 1.5 billion in May 2025.
Pichai also reported that the Gemini app, which provides access to Google’s generative AI model, now boasts 450 million monthly active users. “We continue to see strong growth and engagement, with daily requests growing over 50% from Q1,” he said.
Meanwhile, AI Mode, an AI chat-style experience in Search designed for more conversational and detailed responses has surpassed 100 million monthly users. Currently available in the U.S. and recently introduced in India, AI Mode is still expanding globally. Pichai added that future updates will include Deep Search, a powerful research tool, along with more personalised results.
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On the developer side, over 9 million developers have built with Gemini, and since May, more than 70 million videos have been generated using Veo 3, Google’s advanced text-to-video AI model. The company’s Google Vids feature, which brings AI video creation to Google Workspace, now has nearly 1 million monthly users.
AI is also enhancing collaboration tools: over 50 million people have used AI-powered meeting summaries in Google Meet, the company revealed.
These figures underscore growing interest in AI features across Google’s ecosystem. The company noted that AI Overviews are helping drive over 10% more searches in categories where they’re shown. However, some observers argue that adoption may not be entirely organic, as these features are deeply integrated and often difficult to avoid.
As further proof of Google’s AI scale, the company revealed it now processes 980 trillion tokens per month, more than double the 480 trillion announced at its developer conference just two months ago.
“We are seeing significant demand for our comprehensive AI product portfolio,” Pichai told investors. “Of course, this is all possible because of the long-term investments we have made in our differentiated, full-stack approach to AI.”
Despite the rapid growth, the market response was less enthusiastic. Google’s plans to significantly ramp up capital expenditures in order to stay ahead in the AI race led to a dip in the company’s stock price following the earnings release.