
Google has begun rolling out a new beta feature that allows users to hear real-time translations directly through their headphones, alongside a set of upgrades powered by its Gemini AI models. The announcement marks a significant expansion of Google Translate, combining live audio translation, smarter text interpretation and enhanced language-learning tools.
The new live translation feature works with any pair of headphones and delivers spoken translations while preserving tone, emphasis and cadence, making conversations easier to follow. Google says this helps users better understand who is speaking and how something is being said, rather than just what is being said.
“Whether you’re trying to have a conversation in a different language, listen to a speech or lecture while abroad, or watch a TV show or film in another language, you can now put in your headphones, open the Translate app, tap ‘Live translate’ and hear a real-time translation in your preferred language,” said Rose Yao, Google Vice President of Product Management, Search Verticals.
The beta is now available on Android via the Google Translate app in the United States, Mexico and India. It supports more than 70 languages and functions as a one-way translation tool, allowing users to listen in their chosen language while someone else speaks.
Google plans to expand the feature to iOS and additional countries in 2026.
Alongside live translations, Google is introducing advanced Gemini capabilities to Translate. These updates aim to make text translations more natural and context-aware, especially for slang, idioms and region-specific expressions. Instead of literal word-for-word results, Gemini analyses context to deliver translations that better reflect real meaning.
The Gemini-powered translation upgrade is currently rolling out in the United States and India. It supports translations between English and nearly 20 languages, including Spanish, Arabic, Chinese, Japanese and German. The feature is available across Android, iOS and the web.
Google is also expanding its language-learning tools within Translate to nearly 20 new countries, including India, Germany, Sweden and Taiwan. English speakers can practise German, while speakers of Bengali, Mandarin Chinese (Simplified), Dutch, German, Hindi, Italian, Romanian and Swedish can practise English.
New feedback tools will provide more detailed guidance during speaking practice, while a learning streak feature will track how many consecutive days users have practised. The additions bring Google Translate closer to dedicated language-learning apps, reinforcing its ambitions to compete more directly in that space.






