The European Commission has ordered Google to open Android and Google Search to AI rivals, issuing two legally binding decisions under the Digital Markets Act (DMA) on 16 July 2026. This is not a proposal or a consultation draft — it is a final, enforceable ruling that requires Google to give competing AI assistants such as ChatGPT, Claude and Perplexity the same deep access to Android that only its own Gemini enjoys today, and to share the search data that powers Google Search with rival engines. This Google Android EU order is the most serious regulatory crack yet in Gemini’s default position on the world’s most-used mobile operating system.
The two decisions are separate. One targets Android interoperability under DMA Article 6(7); the other targets Search data-sharing under Article 6(11). Together they attack the two things that keep Google’s AI ahead of everyone else’s on your phone: privileged system access and an unmatched pile of search data.

What the Google Android EU order changes for AI rivals
Under the interoperability decision, Google must make around 11 Android features and functionalities available to third-party AI assistants on comparable terms to Gemini. The Commission has not published a tidy enumerated list, but the categories it is forcing open are well established:
- Voice activation: Rival assistants must be invocable by voice command or wake-word in a way comparable to how “Hey Google” summons Gemini today. Right now, ChatGPT and Claude are confined to being ordinary apps you tap open in the app drawer.
- On-screen context: Competing assistants must be able to read what is currently displayed on screen, similar to Gemini’s system-level access.
- Cross-app actions: Rivals must be able to carry out tasks across your other apps on your behalf — sending a message, booking a ride, ordering food through your preferred app — not just answer questions inside their own window.
- Comparable resources: They must get similar hardware and software resource access so they can be as fast and responsive as Gemini, rather than being throttled into feeling second-rate.
The Commission says these measures include “robust safeguards to ensure that the privacy of users, device integrity and security are protected.” That official wording matters, because it directly pre-empts the objection Google has raised (more on that below).
What changes for Search
The second decision goes after data. Google must share the same underlying anonymized ranking, query, click and view data it uses to run its own Search with competing search engines and with AI chatbots that offer search features. This is the raw material Google has spent two decades accumulating, and rivals have long argued that no one can build a competitive search or search-grounded AI product without it.
There are conditions on both sides. The data has to pass through multi-layered anonymization methods developed with privacy experts and aligned with the draft joint DMA–GDPR guidelines. And the sharing has to happen on “fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory” commercial terms — a transparent “fair formula” for pricing the data — with rivals allowed to run a security and data-protection risk assessment before any data changes hands.
Who wins, and the tradeoff nobody should skip
For anyone who has wanted to use something other than Gemini as their real phone assistant, this is a genuine win. Today, a paid ChatGPT or Claude subscription still leaves you with a glorified app icon: no wake-word, no ability to see your screen, no ability to act across your other apps. The order would let a rival assistant become a true system-level assistant — a first-class citizen instead of an app-drawer afterthought. That is exactly the kind of choice competition is supposed to produce.
But it is worth being honest with yourself about the flip side, on its own merits and separate from anything Google says. Handing any third-party app the power to read your screen and execute actions across your other apps is a real expansion of what software can see and do on your phone. That is a privacy-surface question every reader should weigh when picking which assistant to grant those powers to — the same scrutiny you would apply to Gemini itself. The EU’s mandated safeguards, anonymization requirements and pre-sharing risk assessments exist precisely because this is a live risk, not a hypothetical one. Choice is good; deciding who gets deep access to your device still deserves a moment’s thought.
Google’s response — and why to read it skeptically
Google has pushed back hard, calling the intervention “unwarranted” and arguing that “Android is open by design,” pointing out that rival apps can already be downloaded from the Play Store. It says the mandated equal access “could compromise user privacy, security, and innovation” and warns the changes threaten “vital privacy and security guardrails for millions of Europeans.”
Google is entitled to make that argument, and the privacy-surface point above is real. But Google is not a neutral party here, and its “privacy and security” framing should not be taken as the last word. The exact thing the order dismantles — Gemini’s exclusive system-level access — is also what keeps Gemini the default AI on billions of Android phones. A company defending the arrangement that protects its own product’s built-in advantage has an obvious commercial stake in that fight. Notably, the Commission’s decision explicitly builds in privacy, integrity and security safeguards, which undercuts the idea that opening the door necessarily tears the guardrails down.
How we got here
Today’s ruling concludes two parallel specification proceedings the Commission opened in January 2026, following a public consultation on the draft Android interoperability measures in April 2026. It also lands on top of years of EU antitrust pressure on Google and Android — including the original €4.125 billion Android antitrust fine from 2018 (reduced by a 2022 court ruling) and a separate, still-running dispute over Play Store anti-steering rules.
Announcing the decision, the Commission’s Executive Vice-President Teresa Ribera said: “Our decision will help smaller competitors, search engines or AI assistants to compete and to offer that choice, while protecting users’ privacy.”
When will this reach your phone?
Two things to be clear about. First, the timing. Google must begin sharing search data with eligible rivals from January 2027, and the Android interoperability changes are expected to reach users by mid-2027 — this is the Commission’s own timeline, so nothing changes on your phone today.
Second, the geography. This order applies within the European Union only. It does not change anything for Android users in India, the United States or anywhere else right now, and there is no global or India rollout attached to it. If you are reading from outside the EU, the reason to care is twofold: this is the most serious regulatory challenge yet to Gemini’s default status, a precedent that could pressure Google’s approach in other markets over time; and it is a working preview of what real AI-assistant choice on Android could actually look like if it spreads beyond Europe. For now, though, it stays inside the EU’s borders.
Sources: European Commission — Digital Markets Act, CNBC, Bloomberg






