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Google Docs now lets you set custom instructions for Gemini

Google Docs now lets users store up to 1,000 custom instructions for Gemini, making the AI feel far less like a blank slate and far more like a trained writing partner.

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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May 5, 2026, 8:32 AM EDT
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Google Docs interface with a blank “Untitled document” open, showing the Gemini side panel on the right. The panel displays a saved instruction reading “Use a concise and professional tone for all my documents,” along with confirmation text and an “Ask Gemini” input area labeled Beta.
Image: Google
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If you’ve been using Gemini in Google Docs regularly, you’ve probably noticed one slightly frustrating habit it has – you need to re-explain yourself every single time. “Use bullet points.” “Keep it concise.” “Write in a professional tone.” Over and over again, every new session, like talking to someone who forgets everything the moment you close the chat. Well, Google just fixed that – and it’s a bigger deal than it might sound at first.

Google quietly rolled out a new feature on May 4, 2026, that lets you set custom, persistent instructions for Gemini right inside Google Docs. The idea is simple but powerful: instead of re-prompting Gemini with your style preferences every time you open a document, you tell it once – and it remembers. Whether you want Gemini to always respond in bullet points, use a concise and professional tone across all your documents, or begin every summary with three key takeaways at the top, you set it once and it sticks. No more repetitive housekeeping before you actually get to work.

The way it works is pretty straightforward. You open the Gemini side panel in any Google Doc – that familiar panel that slides in from the right – and you simply ask Gemini to store an instruction. Something like “Always respond in bullet points” or “When summarizing documents, always include a three-bullet-point overview at the top.” Gemini saves that, and from that point forward, every interaction in Docs respects those preferences. You’re not configuring a settings menu or digging through admin panels – you’re just having a natural conversation with Gemini, and it does the rest.

Right now, users can store up to 1,000 active instructions at a time, which is a pretty generous limit. Realistically, most people will probably have fewer than ten or twenty instructions saved – things like preferred tone, formatting habits, language choices, or how they want document summaries structured. The 1,000-instruction ceiling feels like Google’s future-proofing of the feature for power users and enterprise teams who might build out elaborate, highly specific workflows over time.

It’s worth putting this in the context of where Gemini in Workspace has been heading more broadly. Earlier in 2026, Google introduced a wave of Workspace AI upgrades at Google Cloud Next, including something called Workspace Intelligence – a system that can understand the relationships between your files, projects, and collaborators across Docs, Slides, Gmail, and more. Google also added Workspace Studio, an agentic automation hub that lets you build workflows in plain English without writing any code – things like automatic email labeling, pre-meeting briefings, or post-call task documents. The custom instructions feature in Docs fits neatly into that same vision: AI that molds itself around how you work, rather than requiring you to adapt to it.

This isn’t the first time Google has explored the concept of persistent AI instructions. Gemini Cloud Assist, which is the AI layer for developers working in Google Cloud, already supports custom instructions that shape the AI’s persona, reasoning style, and output formatting – and those instructions can be set by administrators to apply across an entire team. The Docs version is the consumer and productivity-focused evolution of that same idea, brought down to the individual user level.

One nuance worth noting: there’s currently no admin control for this feature. That means IT admins can’t push instructions down to users or manage them from the Google Admin Console – it’s entirely in each user’s hands. For enterprise environments with strict tone-of-voice guidelines or document standards, this might feel like a gap. But for individual professionals, freelancers, and content creators, the absence of admin overhead is actually a plus – you own your preferences completely.

In terms of who gets access, the rollout is fairly broad. It’s available to Business Starter, Standard, and Plus plans; Enterprise Starter, Standard, and Plus; Education Plus; and on the consumer side, Google AI Plus, Pro, and Ultra subscribers. The rollout is gradual, happening over up to 15 days from the May 4 launch date, so if you haven’t seen it yet in your account, it’s likely on its way.

The broader implication here is that AI tools embedded in productivity software are slowly moving past the “assistant you have to manage” phase and into something that feels more like a trained collaborator who actually knows your working style. Features like match writing style – which Google also introduced to Docs around April 2026 to unify the voice across any document – are part of the same momentum. Custom instructions take that a step further by making your preferences truly persistent, not just applied on demand.

For anyone who writes a lot in Google Docs – journalists, marketers, writers, business analysts, educators – this is one of those small-sounding updates that will genuinely change your daily workflow. The time you save isn’t measured in hours per use, but in the mental overhead of constantly re-orienting an AI tool to your way of thinking. Set it once, and every document session feels that much more like working with an assistant who already knows you.


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Topic:Gemini AI (formerly Bard)Google Docs
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