Google Retires 25-Year-Old Search Box, Debuts AI-Powered Multimodal Input
Breaking: Google Overhauls Its Iconic Search Interface
For the first time in 25 years, Google has fundamentally redesigned its search box. The company announced the change on Tuesday at its annual I/O developer conference, replacing the classic white rectangular input with a dynamic, AI-driven conversational tool. The new interface accepts text, images, PDFs, videos, and even open Chrome tabs as inputs.

Liz Reid, Google’s vice president and head of Search, called it “the biggest upgrade to our iconic search box since its debut over 25 years ago” during a Monday press briefing. The redesign signals a strategic shift from keyword-based queries to open-ended, multimodal conversations backed by the entire web.
The rollout begins immediately in all countries and languages where AI Mode is available. Google is also merging its AI Overviews and AI Mode features into a single, seamless search flow, eliminating the need for users to choose between traditional results and an AI-forward experience.
What Changed: A Box That Expands, Accepts Files, and Coaches Queries
The search box now dynamically expands to accommodate longer, more conversational queries. The old narrow field subtly encouraged short keyword strings; the new design invites users to articulate complex questions in detail. Users can upload files or drag in content from Chrome tabs directly from the main interface.
Google is also deploying an AI-powered query suggestion system that “goes beyond autocomplete.” Instead of merely predicting the next word, it helps users formulate nuanced queries—coaching them toward the detailed questions that AI Mode handles best. Previously, these capabilities required extra steps; now they sit at the primary entry point.
Background: A Quarter-Century of Stability Disrupted
Since its launch in 1998, Google’s search box remained largely unchanged: a thin white rectangle, a blinking cursor, and a list of blue links. Incremental updates like autocomplete and voice search were minor additions, but the core paradigm never shifted. The new design represents the first major rethinking of how users initiate queries.
Competitors like Microsoft’s Bing and Apple’s Spotlight have experimented with AI integration, but Google’s search box handles over 8.5 billion queries daily. Any change to this gateway has ripple effects across digital advertising, user behavior, and web traffic patterns. The announcement comes as Alphabet faces pressure to maintain its lead in the generative AI race against startups like OpenAI and Perplexity.
What This Means: The End of Keyword Search as We Know It
For everyday users, the redesign transforms search from a transactional tool into an conversational assistant. Instead of typing “weather New York” and scanning results, you might ask “What’s the weather in New York this weekend, and should I bring an umbrella?” and get a synthesized answer. The ability to upload images or PDFs means visual and document-based queries become frictionless.
For content creators and businesses, the shift prioritizes context-rich queries over short-tail keywords. SEO strategies that relied on matching fragmented terms may lose relevance. Google’s AI now interprets intent more deeply, potentially surfacing longer-form content or multimedia responses. The merged AI flow could also reduce click-through rates to external sites, as users get answers directly in the search interface.
Revenue implications are significant: Alphabet generates most of its income from search ads. If users find answers without clicking links, ad impressions could shift. Google has not detailed how ads will integrate into the new multimodal experience, but executives have hinted at “native” placements within AI-generated responses. The redesign is rolling out globally, with support for multiple languages, and will likely pressure competitors to accelerate their own AI search features.
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