Google is adding a new way to get information from Search results. The company is experimenting with Audio Overviews in its Labs program. With this feature, users can hear a short spoken summary of their query. The idea is to let people hear the main points instead of reading them.
How Audio Overviews Work
Audio Overviews use Google’s latest Gemini language models. When a user enters a query that supports the feature, they will see a play button in the results. Tapping play starts a narrated summary that lasts a few sentences. The audio player also shows links to the source pages so users can tap through to read more details. A slider lets users speed up or slow down the narration as they like.

Google will track feedback on each Audio Overview. Users can thumbs up or thumbs down to help the system learn what works best. All experiments live in Labs where users must opt in to try them. If Google thinks a query is a good match, it will add the Audio Overview option above the regular results.
Why Google Added Audio Overviews
The company says Audio Overviews help people who learn by listening. They also suit multitaskers who cannot look at the screen. Google first launched spoken summaries in NotebookLM, its AI research tool, earlier this year. Audio Overviews for Search build on those tests and on the existing AI Overviews feature. Google hopes this new format will serve users who want a hands-free way to get the gist of a topic.
In its announcement, Google notes that audio can make the experience more inclusive. People with vision needs or reading difficulties may find it easier to hear a clear, concise summary. Google also believes that letting people click on links right from the player will guide them to full articles if they want to learn more.
How to Try Audio Overviews
To test Audio Overviews, users must join Google Labs. Labs lives at labs.google.com and shows all of Google’s active experiments. After opting in, users will sometimes see an audio play icon appear alongside the AI-generated summary card. Tapping the icon begins the audio. The player appears at the bottom of the page until the clip ends or the user taps pause. Feedback controls appear under the player so users can like or dislike the summary.
Labs is available only in certain regions and in English to start. Google plans to expand access if the Audio Overviews gain positive feedback. Any user who sees the option can try it and share their experience through the thumbs-up controls.

Impact on Search Experience
Audio Overviews join a growing list of AI-powered tests that try to make Search more helpful. Google continues to refine its AI summaries even as news publishers raise concerns about traffic loss. Giving users an option to listen instead of read may change how they share and engage with content. It could also prompt more sites to optimize for clear, concise summaries that audio can work with.
Google has not set a timeline for the full launch of Audio Overviews. For now, the feature lives in Labs as Google gathers feedback and evaluates usage. Listeners can share their thumbs-up ratings and wait to see if the spoken summaries become a permanent part of Search.