- Eligible Honda models now replace Google Assistant with Gemini.
- The AI understands natural conversation instead of fixed voice commands.
- Gemini Live enables hands-free chats for trips, news, and brainstorming.
Modern technology offers the opportunity for cars to improve after purchase. AI promises more efficient engagement with that same tech. Now, Honda and Google are combining the two. Owners across the USA are about to get a software update that kills Google Assistant and instead introduces Google Gemini. The update rolls out over the air to models equipped with Google built-in.
The big benefit for owners is that Gemini doesn’t require them to use specific commands. Google engineered Gemini to understand natural language, maintain context between requests, and handle more complex conversations. That means instead of asking for “the nearest restaurant,” drivers can request something like a highly rated outdoor lunch spot along their route without having to break the request into multiple commands.
Read: Google Maps Is Getting A Mind Of Its Own Thanks To Gemini AI
Honda says Gemini is available to customers signed into their Google account in vehicles equipped with Google built-in. Eligible models include the 2023-and-newer Accord Touring Hybrid, 2025-and-newer Civic Sport Touring Hybrid, Civic Si, Civic Hatchback Sport Touring Hybrid, all 2024-and-newer Prologues, plus the 2026 CR-V Sport Touring Hybrid, Passport, Pilot, and upcoming Prelude.
The update also introduces Gemini Live, allowing drivers to have free-flowing conversations by saying, “Hey Google, let’s talk.” Honda suggests it can help plan vacations, brainstorm ideas, summarize the day’s news, or answer questions while keeping drivers’ hands on the wheel. With that in mind, Honda is framing this as a convenience upgrade.
The Privacy Catch
Of course, it’s also another step in the industry’s race to make in-car voice assistants genuinely useful. As with any AI assistant, the added convenience comes with privacy tradeoffs.
Gemini can access location, conversation history, and connected apps when users opt in, although Google says drivers can manage or disable much of that data collection through the vehicle’s privacy settings. That doesn’t necessarily mean Google or Honda are using all of that information, but it illustrates how much data these systems are capable of handling.
Which Hondas Get It

