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Google AI Studio can now build Android apps without you writing a single line of code

Google just made building real apps faster, cheaper, and more accessible than ever.

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Sundar Pichai stands in front of a Google logo at Google I/O 2021.
This story is part of our complete Google I/O coverage
Updated less than 6 minutes ago

Google AI Studio had already become one of the best tools for developers to turn ideas into working apps. At Google I/O 2026, the company announced a wave of updates that make it even more powerful, and honestly, more fun to use. Here’s a rundown of everything new.

Could this be the end of complicated Android dev setups?

Probably the biggest announcement is that you can now build native Android apps directly inside AI Studio without installing an SDK, setting up a local environment, or even owning a high-performance computer.

You can describe your idea, and AI Studio will generate production-quality code. From there, you can preview your app inside a browser-based Android Emulator or install it directly on your Android device. 

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When you’re ready, you can publish to Google Play’s Internal Test Track with a single click by connecting your Play Developer account. This is a big deal because native Android development used to be intimidating and resource-heavy. Now, anyone can go from a prompt to a real app in minutes.

What else is new in AI Studio?

Google also added Google Workspace integration, so you can build apps that work directly with Google Sheets, Drive, and Docs data without switching tools. If you prefer local development, you can now export to Google Antigravity, with your conversation history and project files.

On the design side, AI Studio can now generate custom images on the fly using Nano Banana, and a new annotation tool lets you draw directly on the app preview to tweak components and generate new visuals.

Finally, Google is launching a mobile app for AI Studio, available for pre-registration today, so you can build and iterate on apps from your phone.

Of course, you will still need a design and development basic understanding to create a good app, but the barrier to entry has been significantly reduced for all app builders.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over seven years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
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