Google Maps is about to start ordering your takeout for you
Google Maps is getting ready to order your food with Gemini AI.
What you need to know
- Google Maps may soon let you order food with Gemini, cutting out apps like Uber Eats and DoorDash.
- Hidden code in the latest Google Maps app points to an upcoming "Ask Maps to order food" feature, but it's not live yet.
- The feature appears to build on Gemini's Ask Maps experience, taking users from restaurant discovery to placing an order in one conversation.
Google Maps has long been the go-to app for finding a good place to eat. Soon, it may also be the app that orders your meal before you even arrive.
The latest version of Google Maps (26.27.00.941319029) has code strings hinting that the app could be used for more than just discovering restaurants and letting users order food via its Gemini-powered Ask Maps experience, as observed by the folks at Android Authority. If it works as intended, users might not have to get into apps like Uber Eats or DoorDash to place an order.
The strings refer to a feature called “Ask Maps to order food.” The feature isn't live at this point, but the wording gives one of the clearest glimpses yet into what Google is planning.
One of the promotional messages reads: “Tell us what you’re craving, find local favorites, and Maps will order for you — even when you’re on the go.” Other strings include a shortcut to “Order food,” a “Try it out” button, and an option to dismiss the prompt for later.
Gemini does the heavy lifting
The idea probably stems from Ask Maps, an AI assistant Google unveiled earlier this year. Gemini already has a feature that lets users find restaurants and attractions through natural-language conversations, instead of traditional keyword searches. It looks like Google isn't stopping at just recommendations. Instead, it looks like the next logical step is to complete the order for you.
We don’t yet know exactly how Google plans to do this. The big unknown is if Gemini will be able to do the entire ordering process in the cloud or if it’s going to lean on Google’s newer on-device AI capabilities.
Some of the functionality may require newer hardware to work too, such as the agentic AI features Google recently announced for the Pixel 10 series, which can do things like place orders, Android Authority points out. That said, Maps has always offered the same core experience across Android devices, so it’d be surprising if food ordering was limited to a handful of phones after all.
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Then there's the question of what kind of ordering Google has in mind. The app’s strings appear geared toward pickup, implying Maps can order food while you’re driving.
If this feature sounds familiar, it’s because Google has tried in-app food ordering before. The company has also rolled out restaurant ordering into Search, Assistant, and Maps years ago with partners including DoorDash and other delivery services. This time, it’s the AI tier that’s different.
But for now there is no public interface to test and no timeline for launch. As with any APK teardown, just because you see the code doesn’t mean the feature will ship. Google builds a lot of stuff that never makes it into stable releases.
Android Central's Take
I'd be all for that if it actually helps me not bounce around between three different apps to get dinner sorted. If Google Maps can suggest a restaurant, order my dish, and have it ready for me when I arrive, that's a real quality-of-life upgrade. But Google also tends to add more features to Maps every year, and some of them don't stick. I’d rather see the company nail down a fast, reliable ordering experience than turn Maps into yet another bloated app that’s trying to do everything and does very little well.

Jay Bonggolto always keeps a nose for news. He has been writing about consumer tech and apps for as long as he can remember, and he has used a variety of Android phones since falling in love with Jelly Bean. Send him a direct message via X or LinkedIn.
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