If you’ve ever spent hours staring at a blank Google Slides template, dragging text boxes around until they’re almost aligned, you know that the actual creation part of a presentation is often the most tedious hurdle. You have the data, you have the narrative, but translating that into a polished, professional deck is a unique kind of slog. Today, Google is looking to change that by officially rolling out a feature that lets you generate full, multi-slide presentations using Gemini directly inside Google Slides.
This isn’t just a fancy way to slap together a few stock images. The update allows you to leverage Gemini to build a fully native and editable deck from a single prompt. More importantly, it understands that presentations rarely exist in a vacuum. You can now ground your prompt in existing files from your Google Drive, meaning Gemini can pull context from your actual documents, spreadsheets, or PDFs to build slides that aren’t just generic placeholders, but are specific to your project.
The process feels designed to keep you in the driver’s seat rather than handing everything off to an algorithm. You can, for instance, attach an existing presentation to act as a style reference. If your company has a very specific brand aesthetic—colors, fonts, layout preferences—Gemini can ingest that “master” deck and apply the same look and feel to your new slides.
Once you provide your prompt and attach your reference materials, the workflow feels collaborative. You’ll be able to review and refine an outline before Gemini ever drops a single element onto a slide. You can tweak the tone, shift the focus for a specific audience, or adjust the narrative arc. Even after the slides are generated, nothing is locked; they are, as the name implies, fully editable. If you want to swap an image, change a header, or reformat a layout, you’re just editing a standard Google Slides file, not wrestling with a rigid AI output.
Google is also embedding some “smart” suggestions into the side panel. As you work, the tool may surface relevant emails, chats, or documents that it thinks would enrich your presentation, essentially acting as a research assistant that already has access to your digital workspace.
There are a few practical details to keep in mind if you’re looking to dive in. At the moment, this feature supports English-only prompts. Additionally, while the feature is rolling out to a wide range of Workspace tiers—including Business Standard and Plus, Enterprise, and even Google AI Pro and Ultra for individual users—there is a promotional window. Through August 1, 2026, Google is granting higher usage limits for these multi-slide creations, giving users a chance to stress-test the feature. Once that period ends, those who haven’t opted for specific add-ons like the AI Expanded Access license will likely face more standard per-user limitations.
It’s an interesting step in how we approach productivity. Instead of the AI replacing the creator, it’s being positioned as a heavy-lifter for the “first draft” phase, allowing people to focus on the high-level strategy and narrative—the stuff that actually makes a presentation worth watching—rather than the geometry of slide design. If you have access to the feature, you can find the prompt box right in the Slides side panel to get started.
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