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Google AI Max now in closed beta for Shopping and Travel ads, adding AI Brief and text controls; fastest‑growing AI search product with hundreds of thousands
Google has opened AI Max to Shopping and Travel campaigns in a global closed‑beta, adding new AI Brief prompts and text disclaimer controls to its suite of AI‑powered ad tools【1】. The rollout follows a year of rapid adoption that made AI Max the fastest‑growing AI search product in Google’s portfolio, with “hundreds of thousands” of advertisers signed up【2】.
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| Product | AI Max (Google Ads) |
| New formats | Shopping & Travel campaigns (closed beta) |
| Adoption | Hundreds of thousands of advertisers (fastest‑growing) |
| Upcoming feature | AI Brief conversational setup |
AI Max will now pull data from an account’s Merchant Center feed to generate dynamic Shopping ads that answer conversational queries, using three new components: text customization, Final URL Expansion (FUE), and optimal format selection between text‑only and Shopping ads【1】. Advertisers can toggle FUE on or off, and existing bidding controls remain unchanged. For Travel, Google is consolidating separate campaign types into a single Search campaign that incorporates travel feeds, aiming to simplify workflow and provide unified reporting【1】. The shift also promises “real‑time enhancements” by pairing travel keywords with AI Max’s intent‑driven bidding.
Alongside the format expansion, Google introduced AI Brief—a natural‑language prompt field that lets marketers supply business context and guardrails while Gemini, Google’s underlying model, generates assets【3】. AI Brief launches first in English for Search, with Performance Max and Shopping to follow. A separate compliance update adds text disclaimers to Final URL Expansion, ensuring required legal text appears in ads for regulated sectors【3】. Both features roll out globally in all languages over the coming weeks.
Google’s push comes as the company prepares its annual Marketing Live event on May 20, signaling a broader AI‑first strategy for ad products【1】. The company also plans to automatically upgrade Dynamic Search Ads, automatically created assets, and broad‑match campaigns to AI Max starting September 2026, effectively moving the search auction from keyword‑based to intent‑based bidding【2】【4】. While some advertisers report broader query coverage and improved automation, others worry about reduced visibility when traditional controls are replaced by AI‑driven decisions【1】.
The expansion underscores Google’s intent to make AI Max the default engine for search advertising, but the shift raises questions about how much control advertisers will retain as the platform moves toward fully intent‑driven auctions.
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AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 4 outlets · Jun 23, 2026 · How we report
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