Google Photos Video Remix is the app’s newest AI trick: pick any clip from your library, describe the look you want in plain English, and Gemini Omni rebuilds the video for you in a few seconds. Want to relight a too-dark clip with a warm morning glow, drop yourself into a greenhouse, or turn a home video into a watercolor painting? That is now a couple of taps in the Create tab. It started rolling out on July 8, 2026, and India is one of the launch markets.
Before you go looking for it, one important catch: Video Remix is not free for everyone. It is limited to paid Google AI Plus, Pro, and Ultra subscribers. If you are on a regular, no-cost Google account, you will not see the option yet, no matter how many times you refresh. So this is a feature for people already paying for one of Google’s AI plans, not a universal Google Photos upgrade.

What Google Photos Video Remix actually does
Video Remix is powered by Gemini Omni, the Google model built to “create anything from any input.” In Google Photos it sits in the same Create tab as the tools you may already use: image Remix, Photo to Video, and Collages. The difference is that Video Remix works on your video clips instead of stills, and it leans on AI templates and prompts rather than manual timeline editing.
In practice, it covers a few different jobs:
- Cinematic relighting: fix a dark or flat clip by asking for a new mood, e.g. “Relight my video with a morning glow.”
- Background replacement: swap the setting behind you, e.g. “Set my video in a greenhouse.”
- Artistic style filters: reskin the whole clip as watercolor, oil painting, or a raw sketchbook effect.
- Ready-made templates: a library of one-tap looks if you would rather not write a prompt at all.
The point is that you do not need any editing skill. You are not dragging clips, keyframing, or masking anything by hand. You describe the result, and the model produces it. That makes it aimed squarely at quick, share-worthy edits for social media rather than serious post-production.
How to use Video Remix in Google Photos
If you are on an eligible AI plan, here is the full flow from open to shareable clip:
- Open Google Photos and tap the Create tab.
- Select Video Remix (it sits alongside Remix, Photo to Video, and Collages).
- Pick a video clip from your library that you want to transform.
- Choose one of the ready templates, or type a natural-language prompt describing the effect you want — a relight, a background swap, or an art style.
- Wait a few seconds while Google Photos processes the clip, then save or share the finished result.
Because the whole thing runs on templates and short prompts, the learning curve is basically zero. The trade-off is control: you get the look the model decides on, not frame-by-frame precision, so treat it as a fast styling tool rather than a replacement for a real video editor when accuracy matters.
If you like keeping up with how Google Photos keeps shifting around, it is also worth a look at the Google Photos floating bottom bar rolling out on Android, another recent change to how the app is laid out.
Where it is available, and when it will reach your phone
Video Remix began rolling out on July 8, 2026. Google’s own announcement only said it was launching in “select countries” without naming them, but the reported rollout markets include the United States, Argentina, Bangladesh, Brazil, Colombia, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Japan, Mexico, Pakistan, Philippines, South Korea, and Turkey.
As with most Google Photos features, the rollout is server-side and staggered, so it may take a little while to appear even if you are in a listed country and on an eligible plan. If you do not see Video Remix in the Create tab yet, make sure your Google Photos app is updated, confirm your Google AI Plus, Pro, or Ultra subscription is active, and check back over the coming days as the rollout widens.
The specific list of launch countries is corroborated by 9to5Google.





