Google is expanding its “Help Me Schedule” feature to group meetings in Gmail, fixing the one glaring gap that exists ever since it came out in October 2025.
Introduced in October 2025, Help Me Schedule (an AI-powered feature) helped with scheduling meetings between two individuals only. Which, if you’ve ever tried to coordinate a team meeting over an email, isn’t quite useful.
What’s actually changed?
However, with the update, the feature can now organize meetings with multiple guests, directly from the Gmail compose window.
Google’s Gemini AI model — if it has access to your emails — will detect when you’re trying to arrange a meeting, show up a scheduling button in the toolbar, and propose an ideal time slot based on the recipient’s availability (factoring in their working hours and other potential factors).
The guest list, as you’d have guessed by now, is pulled automatically from the email thread, though you can still edit it as needed. Once the recipient of the email picks up a time slot from the available ones, an email invite is sent out to all guests, including the external participants (if any).

Who’s getting the new “Help Me Schedule” and when?
Gmail’s new “Help Me Schedule” feature is available for the Business Standard and Plus, Enterprise tiers, and the Google AI Pro users for Education and Frontline Plus. The rollout for the scheduled release domains begins on March 16, 2026.
Unfortunately, the feature isn’t available for free Gmail users, neither the original one nor the updated one. Anyway, it is a small but genuinely useful update for eligible users.
It might not make headlines at a keynote event, but it will surely help thousands of professionals in scheduling group meetings, a process that, until now, included emailing and sending manual invites.






