Google has introduced Nano Banana Pro, a new image generation and editing model built on Gemini 3 Pro. The company said the model brings reasoning, real-world knowledge and more accurate visual output, expanding on the earlier Nano Banana model released a few months ago.
According to Google, Nano Banana Pro can help users generate visuals from ideas, prototypes, notes and real-time information. The model can also access Google Search’s knowledge base.
“Nano Banana Pro doesn’t just create images. It helps you create helpful content,” the company said, adding that users can produce infographics, diagrams, recipes or snapshots using grounded information.
The company claims the model can render text inside images with greater accuracy and legibility across multiple languages. This includes longer text, stylised fonts, mockups and localised content.
The company also emphasised improved consistency when blending multiple elements. Google says the model can combine up to 14 images and maintain the likeness of up to five people.
The upgraded system introduces new controls for creators, including localised editing, camera angle adjustments, lighting changes and depth-of-field modification. Users can also export creations in multiple aspect ratios and resolutions, including 2K and 4K.
Google is rolling out Nano Banana Pro across its consumer and professional products. In the Gemini app, the model appears under the ‘Thinking’ option within image creation. Free-tier users will get limited access before reverting to the original Nano Banana. AI Plus, Pro and Ultra subscribers will receive higher quotas. In Search’s AI Mode, the model is available in the US for Google AI Pro and Ultra users.
For professionals, the model will be integrated into Google Ads, Workspace tools such as Slides and Vids, and Flow for filmmaking. Developers can access it through the Gemini API, Google AI Studio, Antigravity and Vertex AI.
Google also announced new ways to verify AI-generated content. All images produced by Google tools will continue to include SynthID watermarking. Users can now upload an image in the Gemini app and “ask if it was generated by Google AI,” based on SynthID signals. Free and Pro-tier images will also include a visible Gemini watermark, which will be removed for Ultra subscribers and Google AI Studio developers.
The company said the goal is to support transparency. “We believe it’s critical to know when an image is AI-generated,” Google said.
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