Google has launched Info Agents in Search for AI Ultra subscribers, covering all AI Mode languages and markets.
Robby Stein, vice president of products for Google Search, announced the availability in a post on and said access would be expanded to more people this summer.
Search Agents are now available in all AI Mode languages and markets for Google AI Ultra subscribers.
Simply ask AI Mode to keep you up to date on any topic, and your agent will work around the clock on your behalf to send detailed updates and web links on the fly… https://t.co/9AQyOLuZoV
-Robby Stein (@rmstein) June 12, 2026
The launch comes about three weeks after Google announced the feature at I/O. Agents monitor topics in the background and send updates with links to the web.
How Information Officers Work
Users ask AI Mode to update them on a topic, and the agent monitors new information.
Stein described the feature in his announcement:
“Simply ask AI Mode to keep you up to date on any topic, and your agent will work around the clock on your behalf to send detailed updates and web links as soon as new information becomes available.”
At I/O, Google said agents scour the web, including blogs, news sites and social media posts. They also leverage the company’s real-time data on finances, purchasing and sports.
How Launch Compares to I/O Plan
When Google announced Information Agents in May, the company said it would launch first this summer for AI Pro and Ultra subscribers.
Today’s availability only covers Ultra subscribers, and Stein’s post doesn’t specify when Pro subscribers will have access.
He called the Ultra deployment the first group:
“I’m excited to have this first group testing Agents in Search! We’ll be rolling this out to more people this summer.”
Why it matters
Information agents change when your content can reach searchers. Instead of running the same query every week, a person receives an update when something new appears.
Since updates include links to the web, agent notifications can still drive traffic. Stein’s post does not specify how agents choose which sources to include in an update.
The Ultra requirement keeps the initial audience small. If access expands as planned this summer, more recurring queries could move from active searches to background monitoring.
Looking to the future
Stein’s post doesn’t say whether the feature will eventually reach free users.
At I/O, Google also announced that agent booking capabilities would be rolling out this summer to everyone in the United States. Personalized experiences with Antigravity in Search are planned for the coming months, starting with Google AI Pro and Ultra subscribers in the United States.





