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Gmail’s new “Add to Calendar” AI button uses Gemini to update Google Calendar fast

No more copy-paste! Gmail’s Gemini AI now offers an “Add to Calendar” button for instant event syncing.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 13, 2025, 1:55 PM EDT
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“Add to Calendar” button in Gmail powered by Google Gemini AI
Image: Google
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You’re going through your inbox, coffee in hand, when an email about a meeting next Tuesday catches your eye. Normally, you would sigh, open Google Calendar, and manually enter all the details—date, time, location, and so on. But now, Google has introduced a fantastic new feature that’s about to simplify your life. Say hello to the “Add to Calendar” button in Gmail, powered by the company’s Gemini AI. It’s being rolled out right now, and it’s designed to take the hassle out of scheduling.

Google dropped the news earlier this week, and it’s pretty straightforward: their Gemini AI, which has been flexing its muscles across various Google products, is now smart enough to sniff out event details in your emails. Think meeting invites, dinner plans, or that dentist appointment you’ve been dodging. When it spots something calendar-worthy, a shiny new “Add to Calendar” button pops up right there in Gmail. Click it, and boom—your event’s added to Google Calendar faster than you can say “I’ll pencil you in.”

Once you hit that button, a sidebar powered by Gemini slides in to confirm the deed is done. According to a screenshot Google shared, you even get an edit option in case the AI misses a beat—like if it thinks your 3 pm coffee chat is a three-hour board meeting. It’s not a total reinvention of the wheel; you could already nudge Gemini’s side panel to add events manually. But this? This is automatic, hands-off, “set it and forget it” territory. And honestly, in a world where every saved second counts, that’s a win.

If this sounds vaguely familiar, it’s because Google’s been flirting with calendar automation for years. Back in the day, they rolled out non-AI features that could pluck flight confirmations or restaurant bookings from your emails and slot them into your calendar. You’ve probably seen those little calendar nudges pop up for plane tickets or hotel stays—super handy, right? This new Gemini-powered button builds on that legacy, but with a brainier twist. Instead of just handling the obvious stuff like travel itineraries, it’s now scanning your everyday emails for anything that smells like an event. Your boss emails about a team huddle? Add to Calendar. Your buddy suggests beers on Friday? Add to Calendar. It’s like having a personal assistant who’s obsessed with keeping you on schedule.

The Verge reported that the feature’s already trickling out to users as of March 10, 2025, and early testers—like their writer who gave it a spin—say it’s pretty darn good.

Before you get too excited, here’s the catch: this isn’t for everyone (yet). Google’s playing favorites with its Workspace crowd—think business, enterprise, and education users—along with Google One AI Premium subscribers. If you’re rocking a basic Gmail account, you’re out of luck for now. Workspace folks, from the Business Starter tier all the way up to Enterprise Plus, are in the club, as are those with Gemini Education or Education Premium add-ons. And if you shelled out $19.99 a month for Google One AI Premium (which also gets you 2TB of storage and access to Gemini Advanced), you’re golden too.

TechCrunch noted that Workspace admins need to flip a switch—specifically, enabling “smart features and personalization” in the Admin console—to unlock this for their teams. Oh, and it’s English-only and web-only for now, so mobile users and non-English speakers will have to sit tight. Google says the rollout started March 10 and could take a couple of weeks to hit everyone, so if you don’t see that button yet, don’t panic—it’s on the way.

Let’s be real: we’re all drowning in emails. A 2023 study from the Radicati Group pegged the average office worker at 121 emails a day, and that number’s only climbing. Anything that cuts through the noise and saves a few clicks is a blessing. This “Add to Calendar” button isn’t just about convenience—it’s about keeping your head above water. Imagine not having to toggle between apps, copy-pasting details, or worse, forgetting that Zoom call because you never logged it. Gemini’s doing the heavy lifting, and you’re just along for the ride.

Plus, it’s a peek into where Google’s headed with AI. The company’s been stuffing Gemini into everything lately—Search, Messages, you name it. Ars Technica pointed out that this is part of a broader mission to “add Gemini to as many products as possible,” and Gmail’s just the latest beneficiary. It’s not hard to see why: AI that anticipates your needs is the dream, and this is a step toward that. Sure, it’s not flawless—generative AI like Gemini can still hallucinate details or misread context—but for a simple task like spotting a meeting time, it’s more than up to the job.

This isn’t Google’s first rodeo with AI in Workspace. Last year, they rolled out features like email summarization and drafting help in Gmail, Docs, and beyond. The “Add to Calendar” button is the latest in a string of updates that scream “productivity boost.” And it’s not alone—competitors like Microsoft are pushing similar AI tricks in Outlook with Copilot, which can also snag event details from emails. It’s a race to make your inbox smarter, and Google’s not about to lose.

For Workspace users, this ties into a bigger shift. As of January 2025, Google started bundling “the best of Google AI” into Business and Enterprise plans, per their Workspace blog. That means tools like this button, plus Gemini in Docs, Sheets, and Meet, are becoming standard fare for paying customers. For Google One AI Premium folks, it’s an extra perk alongside goodies like Deep Research and a beefy 1-million-token context window.

So, where does this leave us? For now, it’s a small but mighty upgrade. If you’re in the right user group, keep an eye on your inbox over the next few days—that button should start popping up. And if it works as promised, it could shave real time off your day. Down the line, don’t be surprised if Google cranks it up a notch—maybe adding guests to events, syncing with mobile, or even predicting conflicts before you hit “save.”


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