Google AI Mode Adds Nearby In-Stock Product Search Tool

Google has expanded its AI Mode to help shoppers find products that are in stock at nearby stores, adding a more local, availability-focused option to its AI-powered search experience.
The update centers on shopping queries, where AI Mode can surface nearby retail options for items users are looking to buy. The capability is aimed at bridging online discovery with in-person pickup by steering users toward stores that have the product available locally.
Google’s AI Mode is the company’s AI-driven way to explore information and complete tasks across the web. With the new shopping-related feature, AI Mode can be used to narrow down product options and connect those results to local inventory, emphasizing what a user can actually purchase in their area rather than only what’s available online for shipping.
The development matters because “in stock nearby” has become a deciding factor for many consumers, particularly for time-sensitive purchases. By making local availability a first-class part of AI Mode responses, Google is positioning its AI tools to be useful not only for researching a product, but also for completing the last step of the purchase journey: finding a store that can sell it right now.
For retailers, features like this can influence where shoppers go, especially when a user is comparing similar items or deciding whether to buy online or pick up locally. For consumers, it potentially reduces the friction of checking multiple store sites or calling locations to confirm availability.
The move also signals Google’s continued push to integrate AI features more deeply into everyday browsing and search behavior. In a separate update, Google has highlighted a new way to explore the web with AI Mode in Chrome, underscoring that the company is not limiting AI Mode to a standalone experience but is threading it into the tools people use most.
Google has not provided additional details here about which stores or product categories are covered, how frequently inventory is updated, or whether availability is based on retailers’ direct feeds, third-party data, or other sources. The company also has not detailed any rollout schedule or geographic limitations in the context provided.
What happens next will be measured by how reliably AI Mode reflects local stock and how broadly it works across retailers. As Google continues to develop AI Mode in Chrome and other surfaces, users can expect more features designed to turn AI responses into actionable results, including shopping decisions that depend on local availability.
For now, Google’s message is clear: its AI tools aren’t only meant to answer questions—they’re being shaped to help users complete real-world tasks, including finding what they want on shelves nearby.
