Megan Ellis/Android Authority
TL;DR
- YouTube’s app for smart TVs is getting the recently announced conversation AI search feature.
- Ask YouTube, announced at Google I/O, curates YouTube results, similar to an AI mode in search.
- It is available to a small group of YouTube Premium subscribers in the US.
A few weeks ago at I/O 2026, Google shared a surprising state About its discovery. In almost a year since its launch, the AI ​​mode is already being used by one billion users every month, with the number of queries increasing rapidly with each quarter. Naturally, this is reason enough to bring conversational searches to other platforms, and YouTube is an easy choice given the sheer volume of searches. So, last month, Google also launched Ask YouTube, bringing an AI mode-like conversation search experience to the video platform. Although the feature was limited to the web version, it is not being extended to YouTube for TV.
recent youtube announced Its conversation search tool, Ask YouTube, is coming to the YouTube app on TVs. The feature is not limited to any specific platform like Google TV, but is available on smart TVs, gaming consoles, and streaming devices.
Don’t want to miss the best of Android Authority?


As it does on the Web, Ask lets YouTube users get results based on a verbose, sentence-like question rather than a specific search term. Along with relevant results, this feature will also list specific sections of different YouTube videos, so you don’t have to watch the entire clip.
To receive results in the YouTube app for TV, users can ask a question by pressing the microphone button on their remote. In addition to holding down the physical button on the remote, you can type some keywords into the search bar and then select the Ask YouTube button for a more conversational view of responses.
In addition to using the feature on YouTube’s home feed, you can also hold down the mic button to ask a question while watching a video. Doing so will likely start a new search instead of triggering the existing Ask feature, which lets you ask specific questions for videos.
The test is starting with a “small group of users” and is expected to be more widely available soon. Notably, Ask YouTube is currently limited to Premium subscribers aged 18 and older in the US, but the company plans to expand it to users around the world in the coming months. We expect the same criteria to apply to those watching YouTube on their TV, even though it isn’t specified.
Thank you for being a part of our community. Please read our comment policy before posting.
