Google Gemini now suggests meeting times in Calendar

Google Gemini now suggests meeting times in Calendar

Google

Gemini

Jan 28, 2026

A person is seated at a wooden desk, using a laptop that displays a detailed calendar interface on the screen, showcasing a fully scheduled week in Google Calendar.
A person is seated at a wooden desk, using a laptop that displays a detailed calendar interface on the screen, showcasing a fully scheduled week in Google Calendar.

Not sure what to do next with AI?
Assess readiness, risk, and priorities in under an hour.

Not sure what to do next with AI?
Assess readiness, risk, and priorities in under an hour.

➔ Start the AI Readiness Pack

Gemini in Google Calendar now suggests the best meeting times by scanning attendees’ availability, working hours and conflicts. When several invitees decline, Calendar can surface a banner with a recommended alternative and let organisers reschedule with one click—reducing back-and-forth and speeding up scheduling.

Why this matters now

Finding a time that works for everyone is still a major drag. Google’s latest update brings Gemini directly into Calendar to automate the heavy lifting: it checks who’s free, respects working hours, and proposes the best options. If plans change, it can flag a new slot automatically when people decline—so you keep momentum without endless threads.

What’s new

  • Suggested times with Gemini: When you create or edit an event, click Suggested times and Gemini recommends optimal slots for all guests you can see in Calendar.

  • One-click rescheduling: If multiple attendees decline, Calendar shows a banner with a time everyone can make; update with a single click.

  • Works alongside Gmail’s “Help me schedule”: Google previously added Gemini time-suggestions in Gmail; Calendar now mirrors that experience for multi-attendee meetings.

How it works (in practice)

  1. Create an event in Google Calendar and add your guests.

  2. Click Suggested times to see options based on availability, time zones, and working hours.

  3. Select a slot or adjust the view (Day, 3 days, Week) to explore alternatives.

  4. If you’re rescheduling, open the event, hit Suggested times, or accept the banner suggestion when several guests decline.

Notes & limitations: Suggested times currently only appear on desktop, not the Android or iOS Calendar apps; they won’t show for very long events (over eight hours) or large meetings, and you’ll need appropriate Gemini access enabled by your admin.

Availability & rollout (UK & global)

  • Editions: Business Standard/Plus, Enterprise Standard/Plus, and Google AI Pro for Education add-on.

  • Rollout pace: Rapid Release domains available now; Scheduled Release domains gradual rollout starting 2 February 2026 (up to 15 days).

  • Independent coverage also notes availability across select business and education tiers as the rollout lands.

Example use cases

  • Team planning: Add a cross-functional group, hit Suggested times, and pick the earliest slot that respects everyone’s working hours.

  • Last-minute shuffle: Two key attendees decline? Accept the banner suggestion and reschedule in one click.

  • Inbox to invite: Use Gmail’s Help me schedule for one-to-one threads, then manage changes in Calendar with Gemini’s suggestions.

Tips for better outcomes

  • Share calendars appropriately: Ensure colleagues share availability so Gemini can compute viable slots.

  • Set working hours: Accurate working hours improve proposals, especially across time zones.

  • Use desktop for now: Suggested times are currently desktop-only.

FAQ

Q1: Where do I find Gemini’s suggested times?
Open an event (new or existing) in Calendar on desktop and click Suggested times.

Q2: Can Calendar auto-suggest a new time if people decline?
Yes—organisers may see a banner suggesting a time when all invitees are available; click to reschedule instantly.

Q3: Who gets this feature?
It’s rolling out to Business Standard/Plus, Enterprise Standard/Plus, and Google AI Pro for Education add-on, with Rapid vs. Scheduled Release timing.

Q4: Does it work on mobile?
Not yet—Gemini’s suggested times are currently desktop only.

Q5: How is this different from Gmail’s “Help me schedule”?
Gmail detects scheduling intent in email and proposes slots you can paste into a reply. Calendar’s feature proposes times inside Calendar, including a one-click reschedule nudge for declined meetings.

Gemini in Google Calendar now suggests the best meeting times by scanning attendees’ availability, working hours and conflicts. When several invitees decline, Calendar can surface a banner with a recommended alternative and let organisers reschedule with one click—reducing back-and-forth and speeding up scheduling.

Why this matters now

Finding a time that works for everyone is still a major drag. Google’s latest update brings Gemini directly into Calendar to automate the heavy lifting: it checks who’s free, respects working hours, and proposes the best options. If plans change, it can flag a new slot automatically when people decline—so you keep momentum without endless threads.

What’s new

  • Suggested times with Gemini: When you create or edit an event, click Suggested times and Gemini recommends optimal slots for all guests you can see in Calendar.

  • One-click rescheduling: If multiple attendees decline, Calendar shows a banner with a time everyone can make; update with a single click.

  • Works alongside Gmail’s “Help me schedule”: Google previously added Gemini time-suggestions in Gmail; Calendar now mirrors that experience for multi-attendee meetings.

How it works (in practice)

  1. Create an event in Google Calendar and add your guests.

  2. Click Suggested times to see options based on availability, time zones, and working hours.

  3. Select a slot or adjust the view (Day, 3 days, Week) to explore alternatives.

  4. If you’re rescheduling, open the event, hit Suggested times, or accept the banner suggestion when several guests decline.

Notes & limitations: Suggested times currently only appear on desktop, not the Android or iOS Calendar apps; they won’t show for very long events (over eight hours) or large meetings, and you’ll need appropriate Gemini access enabled by your admin.

Availability & rollout (UK & global)

  • Editions: Business Standard/Plus, Enterprise Standard/Plus, and Google AI Pro for Education add-on.

  • Rollout pace: Rapid Release domains available now; Scheduled Release domains gradual rollout starting 2 February 2026 (up to 15 days).

  • Independent coverage also notes availability across select business and education tiers as the rollout lands.

Example use cases

  • Team planning: Add a cross-functional group, hit Suggested times, and pick the earliest slot that respects everyone’s working hours.

  • Last-minute shuffle: Two key attendees decline? Accept the banner suggestion and reschedule in one click.

  • Inbox to invite: Use Gmail’s Help me schedule for one-to-one threads, then manage changes in Calendar with Gemini’s suggestions.

Tips for better outcomes

  • Share calendars appropriately: Ensure colleagues share availability so Gemini can compute viable slots.

  • Set working hours: Accurate working hours improve proposals, especially across time zones.

  • Use desktop for now: Suggested times are currently desktop-only.

FAQ

Q1: Where do I find Gemini’s suggested times?
Open an event (new or existing) in Calendar on desktop and click Suggested times.

Q2: Can Calendar auto-suggest a new time if people decline?
Yes—organisers may see a banner suggesting a time when all invitees are available; click to reschedule instantly.

Q3: Who gets this feature?
It’s rolling out to Business Standard/Plus, Enterprise Standard/Plus, and Google AI Pro for Education add-on, with Rapid vs. Scheduled Release timing.

Q4: Does it work on mobile?
Not yet—Gemini’s suggested times are currently desktop only.

Q5: How is this different from Gmail’s “Help me schedule”?
Gmail detects scheduling intent in email and proposes slots you can paste into a reply. Calendar’s feature proposes times inside Calendar, including a one-click reschedule nudge for declined meetings.

Get practical advice delivered to your inbox

By subscribing you consent to Generation Digital storing and processing your details in line with our privacy policy. You can read the full policy at gend.co/privacy.

Ready to get the support your organisation needs to successfully use AI?

Miro Solutions Partner
Asana Platinum Solutions Partner
Notion Platinum Solutions Partner
Glean Certified Partner

Ready to get the support your organisation needs to successfully use AI?

Miro Solutions Partner
Asana Platinum Solutions Partner
Notion Platinum Solutions Partner
Glean Certified Partner

Generation
Digital

UK Office

Generation Digital Ltd
33 Queen St,
London
EC4R 1AP
United Kingdom

Canada Office

Generation Digital Americas Inc
181 Bay St., Suite 1800
Toronto, ON, M5J 2T9
Canada

USA Office

Generation Digital Americas Inc
77 Sands St,
Brooklyn, NY 11201,
United States

EU Office

Generation Digital Software
Elgee Building
Dundalk
A91 X2R3
Ireland

Middle East Office

6994 Alsharq 3890,
An Narjis,
Riyadh 13343,
Saudi Arabia

UK Fast Growth Index UBS Logo
Financial Times FT 1000 Logo
Febe Growth 100 Logo (Background Removed)

Company No: 256 9431 77 | Copyright 2026 | Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy

Generation
Digital

UK Office

Generation Digital Ltd
33 Queen St,
London
EC4R 1AP
United Kingdom

Canada Office

Generation Digital Americas Inc
181 Bay St., Suite 1800
Toronto, ON, M5J 2T9
Canada

USA Office

Generation Digital Americas Inc
77 Sands St,
Brooklyn, NY 11201,
United States

EU Office

Generation Digital Software
Elgee Building
Dundalk
A91 X2R3
Ireland

Middle East Office

6994 Alsharq 3890,
An Narjis,
Riyadh 13343,
Saudi Arabia

UK Fast Growth Index UBS Logo
Financial Times FT 1000 Logo
Febe Growth 100 Logo (Background Removed)


Company No: 256 9431 77
Terms and Conditions
Privacy Policy
Copyright 2026