Google’s Universal Cart: search becomes checkout
Google is pushing further into owning the purchase journey, with AI bringing discovery, comparison and checkout into a single experience. Shopping no longer needs to happen across multiple sites, it can take place directly inside Search and Gemini, where users can add products to a shared cart and, in some cases, complete the purchase without leaving Google.
At the centre of this is Universal Cart. Rather than managing separate baskets across different retailers, users now have one unified cart that follows them across Search, YouTube, Gmail and Gemini. Products from multiple retailers can be added into the same basket, while AI works in the background to compare options, track price changes, highlight stock availability and even flag potential compatibility issues.
When it comes to completing the purchase, the process becomes just as seamless. Users can check out in a few taps using Google Pay or choose to pass through to the retailer at the final step if needed.
As Ben Ladbrook, our Performance Lead at S&T, puts it: “Google is no longer just a search engine sending traffic to your site; they want to become a transaction engine.”
It’s a small change in behaviour, but a big shift in control.
Google’s new intelligent shopping basket is starting to roll out across Search and the Gemini app in the US this summer.
Why this matters:
For years, the job of paid search has been to get the click and send users to a site, where the landing page and checkout take over. That model is now changing.
If users are checking out inside Google, your product feed becomes your shop window. Brands with clean, complete and well-structured product data will win. If your data’s bad, you won’t show up.
There’s also a broader question around how far this should go. Jeff, our Head of Performance, touches on this in his blog on what it means for brands when Google starts to own more of the journey end to end. You can read his take here: Google’s Universal Cart: a step too far?