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Gemini vs. ChatGPT: What's the difference? [2026]

By Ryan Kane · April 20, 2026

ChatGPT had a two-year head start on Gemini, and for a while, it showed. But Google has spent the last couple of years building aggressively and now has a set of models and features that make it a truly competitive . If you haven't looked at Gemini recently, you might be surprised by what you find. 

Both tools are now equally impressive in nearly all the ways that matter. Their flagship models are neck and neck on , and the experience of using either one day-to-day has never been more similar. Today, choosing between them is more about ecosystem fit and creative tools, along with a few features that will either matter a lot to you or not at all.

I've spent considerable time testing both Gemini and ChatGPT, and here, I'll show you how they stack up.

Table of contents:

Gemini vs. ChatGPT at a glance

The gap that separates Gemini and ChatGPT is narrowing, but they still differ in a few important ways. Here's a quick breakdown of how they compare, but read on for more details.

ChatGPT

Gemini

Company

OpenAI

Google

Models

GPT 5.5 (flagship); GPT-5.3 (default on free plans)

Gemini 3.5 Flash (flagship); Gemini 3.1 Pro

Context window

Up to 1 million tokens 

Up to 1 million tokens

Video generation

No

Yes (Veo 3, with audio)

Music generation

No

Yes (Lyria 3 Pro)

Image generation

Yes (GPT Image 2)

Yes (Nano Banana 2)

Memory

Persistent memory; learns from conversations

Persistent memory; Personal Intelligence automatically pulls context from your Gmail, Photos, YouTube, and Search; opt-in, US only

Voice mode

Yes

Yes

Agentic AI

ChatGPT agent, Atlas browser

Gemini Agent currently in beta; wider release coming soon

Custom chatbots

Yes (GPTs), for paid users 

Yes (Gems), for all users

Pricing

Free plan available; ChatGPT Go $8/month (includes ads); ChatGPT Plus $20/month; ChatGPT Pro $100-200/month

Free plan available; Google AI Plus $7.99/month; Google AI Pro $19.99/month; Google AI Ultra $249.99/month

Both are powered by state-of-the-art AI models

ChatGPT and Gemini are powered by models that can handle text, images, audio, coding, and more. ChatGPT runs on OpenAI's GPT-5 family ( is currently the flagship, with GPT-5.3 available on the free plan); Gemini is powered by Google's , with Gemini 3.5 Flash as the default and Gemini 3.1 Pro available as a more powerful model for paying subscribers.

For most everyday tasks, you'd be hard-pressed to tell them apart. Both Gemini and ChatGPT offer web search, , for creating and editing documents, voice mode, and for complex problems. For a while, were a meaningful differentiator, but you now get a window of one million tokens with either chatbot—enough to analyze hours of audio or multiple books in one go. While there are small differences in each chatbot's core features and underlying models, they're close enough that technical performance shouldn't be a deciding factor.

What you will find are stylistic differences. For example, Gemini now offers Visual Layout, which generates a split-screen interactive view for some queries. Gemini created a Dubrovnik vacation itinerary for me with an interactive map full of pins, each of which pulls images and reviews straight from Google Maps.

ChatGPT has its own usability perks. My current favorite ChatGPT feature is mid-stream editing, which lets you make in-the-moment edits to long tasks like deep research rather than canceling them and starting over.

Of course, neither of these features should be dealbreakers, and it's also fair to assume that any useful capabilities in one chatbot will be copied by the other shortly. So: since there's not much to work with here, let's cross technical performance and chatbot usability off our decision matrix and move onward.

To learn which AI model your team should use, check out the AutomationBench leaderboard. AutomationBench is Zapier's open evaluation tool for measuring how well models handle real, complex business workflows.

Only Gemini generates videos and music; both create images

If visual creative work is your primary AI use case, Gemini is probably a better overall pick. You can generate images, videos, and music, and you also get access to specialized apps like Google Flow for AI filmmaking and for business videos. ChatGPT just does images.

ChatGPT and Gemini offer world-beating image generation models, with GPT Image 2 and both sitting at the top of . There are a couple of minor differences: ChatGPT creates a single image, while Gemini generates a set of four, and Gemini gives free users a higher daily image generation quota. But you really can't go wrong with either option for images.

Video is a clear win for Gemini. As of March 2026, ChatGPT discontinued , its . Meanwhile, Google's video generator—available to paid Gemini subscribers—consistently ranks for performance. It generates audio natively along with video, supports character continuity, and lets you fine-tune to your heart's desire (or until you run out of credits) if you're going for a certain look.

While you can generate perfectly fine videos in Gemini chat, you get access to more granular controls with . It's available to anyone with a Google account, though you can't do much if you're not a paid Gemini subscriber.

You can also create AI-generated songs with Gemini by clicking Create music and describing the track you want to hear. I was expecting AI slop when I tested this, but in general, these songs are shockingly listenable. They're powered by Google's music engine, the latest version of which can now create tracks up to three minutes long. There's a lot of anxiety about AI tools like this displacing musicians, so I'm glad to see Gemini adds guardrails: it won't mimic individual artists, it adds imperceptible audio watermarks, and your prompt will be denied or revised if you ask for something that's protected by copyright.

Gemini offers big advantages if you already use Google's ecosystem

As you can imagine, Gemini is deeply integrated into the Google ecosystem. Without leaving your chat, you can ask Gemini to retrieve real-time information from other Google apps, including Gmail, Drive, Maps, Flights, Hotels, and YouTube. Just type @[name of the app you want to look in], and then enter your prompt. 

In practice, this means you can do things like: 

  • Pull details from a specific Gmail thread without leaving your chat

  • Bring a file directly from Google Drive into your conversation, or export a Gemini response back to Docs, Gmail, or Keep

  • Plan a trip by pulling live data from Google Flights, Google Hotels, and Google Maps directly into your conversation

If you ask Gemini to reference Gmail or Drive, it'll pull not only details from the referenced email or file, but also clickable links if you want to dig a little deeper.

An even more interesting feature is , which pulls in context from the rest of your Google apps proactively. Once you opt in, Gemini connects to your Gmail, Google Workspace apps, Photos, YouTube, and Search history to personalize its responses without you having to explain yourself each time. While ChatGPT connects to Google apps like Drive and Gmail, it can't compete with this level of ecosystem-wide integration—it's a real differentiator for Gemini.

As much as I like the concept of Personal Intelligence, I've had a hard time finding useful ways to put it to work. Gemini suffers from the same memory quirks as other AI chatbots: it awkwardly shoehorns facts about you into conversations where they're not relevant, and its "personalized" observations can be hopelessly generic. (When I asked Gemini what it knows about me, it said "You enjoy celebrating birthdays and attending formal gatherings, such as weddings.")

Beyond the core Google apps, Gemini comes with a few other tools worth knowing about. let you create specialized AI mini-apps and custom workflows and share them with others on your team. Notebooks, a newer Gemini feature, is more or less like with the added benefit that it syncs with (Google's AI research assistant app) for more in-depth work. And for developers, Google AI Pro subscribers get access to Antigravity, Google's agentic coding platform.

Gemini doesn't offer many native integrations with non-Google apps. Fortunately, Gemini integrates with thousands of apps via Zapier (using Zapier's ). Learn more about across your tech stack, or check out these premade workflows.

ChatGPT has a broader ecosystem and a head start on agentic AI

While much of ChatGPT's edge over Gemini has eroded over the last year or two, it still has more momentum when it comes to coding and features.

OpenAI has 21% of the enterprise coding market, compared with for Google. (Though Anthropic beats both of them handily.) , OpenAI's , which comes bundled with ChatGPT Plus, has been a big driver of that adoption. Anecdotally, current developer chatter puts , while Google's Antigravity—paired with Gemini 3.1 Pro—is far behind.

Image source:

ChatGPT also has a more mature set of agentic products that handle tasks autonomously. is the main one: it can independently tackle web-based tasks like browsing sites, filling out forms, and completing purchases. And Atlas, OpenAI's , gives you a persistent ChatGPT sidebar with full context of whatever page you're on. OpenAI has also hired the creator of to lead the development of the next generation of their personal AI agents.

Gemini offers agentic coding, but it doesn't currently have anything approaching the capabilities of ChatGPT agent. Google does have an agentic product—Gemini Agent—but it's currently in beta and limited only to Google AI Ultra subscribers in the US (meaning you can't use it unless you're paying $249.99/month). Google is expected to roll Gemini Agent out more widely soon, so this picture might look quite different in a few months.

If you use lots of non-Google apps, ChatGPT is a stronger choice. It connects natively to the Microsoft ecosystem, including SharePoint, OneDrive, Outlook, and Teams, which makes it a natural fit for many enterprise users. ChatGPT integrates with a total of 140+ work apps, including GitHub, Dropbox, Canva, HubSpot, and Slack, along with a smaller set of consumer apps like Spotify and Ticketmaster.

gives it access to another 9,000+ apps. And with , you can perform thousands of actions across those apps without leaving your chat interface. Learn more about , or get started with one of these Zapier templates.

Both apps are priced similarly, but Gemini offers more for free

OpenAI charges $20/month for ChatGPT Plus, and Google charges $19.99/month for Google AI Pro. With a mere penny separating the flagship paid versions of each service, you might assume there's not much to discuss here. But both apps offer multiple paid tiers, so it's worth doing a quick breakdown.

ChatGPT's paid plans now start at $8/month for , which is ad-supported and sits in between the free plan and the $20/month plan in terms of features and usage caps. There's also the plan for power users, which starts at $100/month for 5x more usage than the Plus plan. (Heavy coding usage is a big reason to upgrade to the Pro plan.) If you want your team to be able to work together on ChatGPT, you can buy a Business plan for $25/user/month.

Google offers a similar pricing model. For $7.99/month, Google AI Plus gives you more usage and access to more AI models. Google AI Pro, at $19.99/month, gives you more AI credits (for video generation) and expanded coding features. For $249.99/month, you can subscribe to Google AI Ultra and get 25x more AI credits, making it a good option for AI filmmaking.

If you're like me, you probably pay Google for something already—I pay for extra storage and YouTube Premium—so it's worth taking a close look at what's included in each AI plan. Since Google bundles its products together aggressively, you might be able to pay a lower effective rate.

Finally, if you use Google Workspace, you already have some level of access to Gemini, though it's hard to tell exactly how this maps to the consumer plans. The Business Starter plan, which I use, seems to be more limited than the Google AI Plus access I have through my personal account, while the Business Standard plan boasts "expanded access."

You can't go wrong with either app as a free user, but it's worth pointing out that Gemini is more generous. ChatGPT gives you limited messages, uploads, image generation, deep research, and model access. (You may also see ads depending on your region.) Gemini lets you send more messages and generate more images before cutting you off, and you also get access to a wider range of complementary Google products. Of course, you don't really need to choose: there's no reason not to get the free versions of both apps and jump between them as needed.

Gemini vs. ChatGPT: Which is better?

If you're still wondering what the differences are between Gemini and ChatGPT, the truth is—not much. But that answer probably doesn't do much for you if you're deciding which one to use.

  • Choose Gemini if you rely on Google's ecosystem or if you're doing lots of visual creative work. Gemini's integration with the rest of Google's products is impressive: it's incredibly simple to pull information from Gmail, Drive, Maps, Photos, and YouTube into a single conversation. And between Veo 3, Google Vids for corporate video, Flow for AI filmmaking, and Lyria for song generation, Google offers an impressive suite of tools for creatives.

  • Choose ChatGPT if you want an all-in-one assistant that works across any tech stack, especially if you need agentic and coding features. Its native connections to the Microsoft ecosystem and 140+ other business apps make ChatGPT useful for a wider range of professional circumstances. It's also ahead of Gemini on both agentic features and coding performance.

If you're planning to move your team over to another AI model, pad your timeline. Nearly expect a sub-month switch, but around 6 in 10 past AI vendor migrations either failed or took more effort than expected. Or take advantage of , so you can use whatever model fits the task.

Related reading:

This article was originally published in March 2023 by Elena Alston and has also had contributions from Jessica Lau. The most recent update was in April 2026.

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👁 Ryan Kane picture

Ryan Kane

Ryan Kane is a writer and marketer based in Mérida, Mexico. He writes about SaaS, AI, and marketing while building fun Internet side projects. Learn more: ryankane.co.

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