Google on Tuesday released Nano Banana 2 Lite, the newest addition to its Gemini image generation lineup.
The model, officially named Gemini 3.1 Flash Lite Image, can turn a text prompt into an image in about four seconds, roughly five times faster than the standard Nano Banana model. It also costs just $0.034 per 1,000 images, making it one of the cheapest options on the market.
Alongside the image model, Google widened access to Gemini Omni Flash, a video generation and editing tool first shown off at Google I/O earlier this year. Omni Flash is now available to developers through Google AI Studio and the Gemini API for the first time, priced at $0.10 per second of video, matching the cost of Google's Veo 3.1 Fast model.
Both tools are live now in Google AI Studio, the Gemini API, and the Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform. On the consumer side, Nano Banana 2 Lite is rolling out to AI Mode in Search, the Gemini app, NotebookLM, Google Photos, Google Flow, and Google Ads.
Why it matters
Speed and cost have become the real battleground in AI image generation, not just image quality. Google is positioning Nano Banana 2 Lite as the new default for developers who need to churn out large volumes of images quickly. The company recommends it as a replacement for the original Nano Banana model, which it now refers to as "legacy."
Google described the strategy behind pairing the two new tools together, saying, "Building with generative media is often about creative iteration," and that developers can now "build comprehensive, end-to-end multimedia experiences that connect rapid image generation with video creation and editing," according to the company's blog post.
The trade-off
Nothing about the speed boost is free.
Ars Technica reported that Nano Banana 2 Lite struggles more with rendering small text, is more prone to errors in infographics, and shows weaker consistency when generating the same character across multiple images. Google itself acknowledges the model prioritizes velocity over polish.
Gemini Omni Flash has its own rough edges. According to Google's blog, the model currently caps out at 10-second video clips, doesn't yet support audio references or scene extension via the API, and struggles with character consistency during scene changes or camera pans.
Nano Banana 2 Lite now sits at the entry point of a four-tier system: the legacy Nano Banana, the new budget-focused Lite version, the general-purpose Nano Banana 2, and Nano Banana Pro for professional, high-accuracy work.
The commoditization of creation
This announcement is less about technological breakthroughs and more about the commoditization of generative media. Google is aggressively lowering the barrier to entry, not by offering the best quality, but by offering the best bang for your buck in high-volume settings.
For small businesses and startups, this is a game-changer for A/B testing ad creatives or generating massive datasets for training other models. However, this also signals a saturation point in the market.
By offering a model this cheap, Google is betting that enterprises will prioritize cost efficiency over the risk of producing lower-quality, generic content. The rapid-fire nature means the web will likely be flooded with more low-effort AI imagery.
Also read: Google expanded personalized AI image generation in Gemini with Nano Banana 2 and Google Photos, allowing prompts to draw on a user’s connected apps and personal context.


