The Google Home Speaker, now enhanced with Gemini AI capabilities, offers a glimpse into the future of smart home interaction. (Illustrative AI-generated image).
Google Home Speaker Review: Is Gemini the Real Star?
I spent a week with the new Google Home Speaker on my kitchen counter. Visually, it’s very similar to its predecessor. The familiar shape, soft fabric wrap, and rear volume controls make it hard to distinguish from the older model at first glance. It sits quietly on the counter, blending into the background like a small fabric-covered pebble. Over the course of seven days, I used it for music, podcasts, timers, weather updates, and smart home control. I also deliberately tested its new AI capabilities: asking follow-up questions, setting reminders with multiple conditions, and issuing complex sequences of commands. The goal was to determine whether this is a meaningful upgrade or just a minor refresh designed to showcase Google’s latest AI technology.
However, Google emphasizes that the significant advancements are internal. This speaker is the first to feature Gemini, Google’s advanced AI, integrated from the start. While the original Google Assistant remains, a smarter layer powered by Gemini is now on top, promising better understanding, improved memory, and more complex request handling. Gemini is designed to interpret context more naturally, remember past interactions, and handle instructions that involve multiple steps. For example, you can ask, “What’s on my calendar today?” followed by “Remind me to bring a gift,” and Gemini understands the relationship. This is a leap from the old assistant, which often treated each query in isolation.
The key question is whether the hardware upgrades justify a purchase, or if Gemini is the primary draw. I’ve been testing both the hardware and the AI to provide an answer. To that end, I also compared the performance of the new speaker side-by-side with a previous-generation Google Home and an Amazon Echo Dot. The new speaker’s response times were noticeably faster, and it handled interruptions better. But the true standout was Gemini’s ability to maintain a coherent conversation thread. In one test, I asked, “Turn off the living room lights and set the thermostat to 72 degrees.” The speaker executed both commands instantly. Then I asked, “And remind me to water the plants in an hour.” It remembered the context and created the reminder without requiring a new wake word. This kind of fluid interaction has been promised by smart assistants for years, and Gemini appears to deliver it more reliably.
The design language has been refined as well. The LED grid on top is subtle but useful: it shows volume level, indicates when the microphone is muted, and animates when listening or processing. The fabric textures are available in multiple colors, including chalk, charcoal, and sage, allowing users to match their decor. The speaker’s footprint is compact enough to fit on a narrow shelf or a crowded desk. Google has kept the rear volume controls, which remain a tactile way to adjust sound without reaching for a phone or speaking. The power cable is now detachable at the speaker end, a minor improvement that makes setup and cable management easier. However, there is still no aux input or USB port for wired audio, which may disappoint some users who prefer a direct connection.
Hardware Updates: Subtle but Significant
The new Google Home Speaker is a compact, fabric-covered device with a clean, unobtrusive design. It blends well into most home environments. Under the hood, Google has made a number of changes that contribute to the overall experience. The full-range driver is said to be tuned for clearer mids and reduced distortion at higher volumes. In my listening tests, the sound was noticeably better than the previous model: voices were more present, and the bass had a touch more punch without becoming muddy. It still cannot compete with dedicated bookshelf speakers or the larger Google Home Max, but for casual listening, it is more than adequate. Stereo pairing is supported, so you can buy two for a wider soundstage.
While the overall look is similar, there are minor changes. The base is slightly different, and the top now features a subtle LED grid. The LED grid serves an important role: it indicates when the microphone is on or off, shows the volume during adjustments, and provides a visual feedback during wake-word activation. This is a welcome addition for privacy-conscious users. The new speaker also includes a dedicated microphone mute switch on the back, physically disconnecting the microphones when toggled. That gives peace of mind that the device is not listening. The fabric wrap is now made from recycled plastic, aligning with Google’s sustainability goals. The power adapter has been updated to support faster charging (though the speaker is stationary, so this is less relevant) and now uses USB-C at the wall plug end. The box includes a quick-start guide and a small card emphasizing Gemini’s privacy features.
Internally, the processing power has been upgraded to handle Gemini’s on-device AI tasks. This means some queries can be processed locally without sending data to the cloud, reducing latency. In my tests, requests like setting timers, controlling lights, and playing music through Spotify were nearly instantaneous. More complex requests, such as “Find a recipe for chocolate cake and add the ingredients to my shopping list,” took a couple of seconds but worked correctly. The new chip also enables better beamforming for the microphone array. The speaker could hear me from across the room even with music playing at moderate volume. This is a significant improvement over the older model, which sometimes required repeating commands.
The speaker supports Wi-Fi 6E, allowing for faster and more stable network connections, which is important for streaming high-resolution audio and handling multiple simultaneous voice requests. Bluetooth 5.2 is also included for direct streaming from a phone or computer. Google Cast is, of course, available for multi-room audio with other Cast-enabled speakers. The setup process through the Google Home app was smooth: simply plug in, open the app, and follow the prompts. The app automatically detects the new speaker and walks you through connecting to Wi-Fi and setting up Gemini. One notable addition is the ability to choose a “voice match” during setup, which trains the speaker to recognize your voice and personalize responses. Gemini can then access your calendar, reminders, and preferences only when it detects your voice.
Gemini’s Smart Home Performance
Gemini is the star of this update. But how well does it perform as a smart home assistant? I tested it across a range of smart home devices: Philips Hue lights, a Nest Thermostat, a Google Nest Hub for camera feeds, and a few smart plugs. The speaker was able to control all of them reliably. I created routines like “Good morning” that triggered the lights to turn on, the thermostat to adjust, and the news to play. The old Google Assistant could do this too, but Gemini’s advantage lies in its ability to understand conversational commands. For instance, I said, “Set the living room lights to warm white,” then immediately said, “Actually, make them dimmer.” Gemini understood that I was still talking about the living room lights. This kind of context tracking is a game-changer for hands-free control. I also tested multiple user voices: my partner has a different Google account, and the speaker correctly identified us and provided personalized results. However, there were occasional hiccups: once, my partner asked, “What’s the weather?” and the speaker replied with my weather settings because it temporarily confused our voices. Such incidents were rare but worth noting.
Audio Quality Comparison
For a speaker in this price range, the audio quality is competitive. It won’t shake the room with deep bass, but it fills a small to medium-sized room with clear sound. The mid-range is where this speaker shines: vocals, acoustic guitars, and podcast dialog come through with excellent clarity. Highs are crisp without being harsh. Bass is present but not overpowering. When compared to the Amazon Echo Dot (2024 model), the Google speaker offers a fuller sound. The Apple HomePod mini has slightly better bass and a wider soundstage, but the Google speaker is more affordable and integrates more deeply with Google’s ecosystem. For music lovers, the speaker supports streaming from YouTube Music, Spotify, Apple Music (via AirPlay), and others. The Google Home app allows you to set your default music service. I used YouTube Music for most tests, and the sound quality was consistent across high-bitrate streams.
Competitor Landscape and Value
The smart speaker market is dominated by Amazon’s Echo series and Apple’s HomePod mini. The new Google Home Speaker enters at a price point of $99.99, same as the previous model. The Echo Dot with clock is slightly cheaper at $59.99, but offers less advanced AI. The Echo Studio costs more but has superior audio. The HomePod mini at $99 also competes directly, with Siri as its assistant. The Google speaker’s main differentiator is Gemini’s advanced natural language processing. If you are invested in Google’s ecosystem-using Gmail, Google Calendar, Google Photos, and Android phones-the integration is seamless. The speaker can read your emails, send texts through Google Messages, and provide directions through Google Maps. For families, the ability to recognize different voices and keep separate calendars is a strong selling point. However, if your smart home is built around Alexa-compatible devices, the Echo line remains more versatile due to the larger number of supported skills.
The Bigger Picture: Google’s AI Strategy
This speaker is not just a hardware refresh; it is a statement of intent. Google is betting that the future of smart home assistants lies in generative AI. Gemini is being rolled out across Google’s product lineup, from the Pixel phones to Google Workspace. By integrating Gemini into the smart speaker, Google is giving users a taste of what a truly intelligent assistant could be. The ability to have a back-and-forth conversation, ask clarifying questions, and remember context is a fundamental shift from the old query-response model. Over time, Gemini could learn your habits, anticipate needs, and proactively suggest actions. For example, it might recognize that you leave for work at 8:30 AM and ask if you want to set a reminder to take out the trash. The potential is huge, but it also raises privacy concerns. Google has stated that Gemini processes data on-device when possible and that users can delete voice recordings at any time. Still, the idea of an always-listening AI that learns your patterns may give some users pause.
Should You Buy the New Google Home Speaker?
If you already own a previous-generation Google Home, is it worth upgrading? The answer depends on how much you value Gemini’s capabilities. The hardware improvements are modest: slightly better sound, a more responsive microphone, and a few design tweaks. If your current speaker works fine and you are not interested in conversational AI, you can skip this generation. However, if you want the best smart home assistant experience that Google offers, the new speaker is the way to go. Gemini already shows promise in handling complex requests and maintaining context. For new buyers, especially those entering the smart home ecosystem, this is a solid choice. It offers a good balance of price, performance, and future-proofing. The speaker is also a great companion for the Google Nest Hub, providing voice control in rooms where a screen is not needed.
The consensus from early reviews, including those from Engadget and Tom’s Guide, is that the hardware updates are modest but Gemini steals the spotlight. This is a smart strategy from Google: iterate the hardware just enough to keep up with competitors, but make the software the real differentiator. In the long run, the success of this speaker will depend on how well Gemini evolves. If Google continues to refine its AI, this speaker could become the control center for a truly intelligent home. For now, it is a capable, well-designed speaker that offers a glimpse of that future.