It looks like the honeymoon phase for Google’s latest AI tools is already over. Just weeks after launching its flagship Gemini 3 Pro and the Nano Banana Pro image generator, Google is quietly tightening the belt on what free users can actually do.
When these tools first dropped, the rules were clear: you got five prompts a day with the top-tier model and three images. But in the last few days, that safety net has vanished. If you’re on the free plan, you now have something called “Basic access.” Google isn’t promising a fixed number of prompts anymore; instead, it’s warning that your daily limit could change wildly depending on how busy its servers are.
Not just Gemini, Nano Banana also takes a hit
Recommended VideosThe image generator took a hit, too. You are now capped at a hard two images per day with Nano Banana Pro, and even that comes with a warning that high demand might choke off access.
Google
To top it off, NotebookLM – which just got those cool new features to auto-generate infographics and slide decks – has hit the pause button. Those features have been temporarily pulled for free users entirely, and even paid subscribers are seeing limits. Google says it’s purely a capacity issue and it hopes to bring them back soon.
This is a classic case of supply and demand breaking the system. Everyone wants to use these powerful new AI models, but there simply aren’t enough supercomputers to run them all at once.
Google isn’t alone here. We are seeing the exact same thing happen with OpenAI, Anthropic, and Perplexity. They are all realizing that giving away their best tech for free is incredibly expensive and resource-heavy. By introducing these “fluctuating” limits, Google is giving itself wiggle room to prioritize the people who are paying the bills when traffic gets heavy.
Time to empty your pockets
If you have been relying on the free version of Gemini to get your work done, your reliable assistant just became a lot more unpredictable.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends
Tasks that used to be a breeze – like brainstorming a quick presentation with visuals or running a complex research query – might now hit a wall halfway through. The unpredictability is the real killer here; you can’t plan your workflow around a tool that might cut you off because too many other people are using it at the same time.
Related: Google may soon let Gemini read your NotebookLM files and answer related queriesGoogle says it wants to bring full features back to NotebookLM and stabilize things as it builds more servers. But let’s be honest: the direction of travel is clear.
As these AI models get smarter and more popular, the “free” tier is likely going to keep shrinking. Google is gently (or not so gently) nudging power users toward its paid AI Pro or Gemini Advanced subscriptions. If you want guaranteed access to the good stuff, you’re probably going to have to start paying for it.