Google Rolls Out AI Mode in Search Across Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa
TLDR
- Google has introduced a new AI-powered search feature, AI Mode, in Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa, marking the tool’s first rollout in Africa.
- AI Mode, powered by a custom version of Google’s Gemini 2.5 model, enables users to ask more complex, multi-part queries and receive comprehensive, AI-generated responses
- The feature began rolling out on August 21, appearing as a tab in Google Search and in the mobile app. Google said the system uses advanced reasoning
Google has introduced a new AI-powered search feature, AI Mode, in Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa, marking the tool’s first rollout in Africa.
AI Mode, powered by a custom version of Google’s Gemini 2.5 model, enables users to ask more complex, multi-part queries and receive comprehensive, AI-generated responses. The tool supports multimodal inputs—text, voice, and images—and is designed to provide intuitive answers while prominently linking to web sources.
“AI Mode reimagines the search experience,” said Google Africa MD Alex Okosi. “It allows users to explore a wider range of content while giving them clearer, more useful answers.”
The feature began rolling out on August 21, appearing as a tab in Google Search and in the mobile app. Google said the system uses advanced reasoning, breaking queries into subtopics before compiling results. When confidence in results is low, the tool defaults to traditional search listings.
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Key Takeaways
The launch signals Google’s deeper commitment to AI adoption in Africa. Last month, the company announced a $37 million investment in AI research, African language support, food system innovation, and digital skills training. By debuting AI Mode in three of Africa’s largest internet markets, Google is testing whether AI-powered search can boost engagement and expand the diversity of websites visited. The feature could reshape how users interact with search engines, moving from single-question queries to more exploratory, context-rich interactions. For publishers and startups, the inclusion of prominent web links could open discovery opportunities, but concerns remain over how AI aggregation might impact traffic patterns. With Africa’s young, mobile-first population, the region offers a critical testing ground for Google’s next-generation search model.






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