Google is preparing to enable Chrome’s Autofill AI features by default on Android and iOS devices in the United States, expanding functionality that is already available more broadly on desktop.
A new Chromium change updates several Autofill, Google Wallet, and sync-related feature flags so they are enabled by default for US mobile users. Google says the launch has already received internal approval, although the code change is still being reviewed and has not yet been merged.
Autofill AI is designed to understand more complicated forms and fill information that traditional Autofill may not recognise. Instead of being limited to basic details such as your name, address, or payment information, it can work with additional structured data stored in Chrome or your Google account.
The update also expands support for information linked to Google Wallet. Chromium’s code references flight reservations, vehicle registrations, private passes, and metadata associated with saved valuables. Chrome may use this information to suggest relevant details when it recognises a matching form.
Google is also enabling the required sync features in the US, allowing supported Autofill AI information and Wallet metadata to remain available across signed-in mobile devices. On iOS, the change additionally enables Autofill support for date fields by default in the US.
The rollout is being handled differently across platforms. Autofill AI is already enabled globally by default on Windows, macOS, Linux, and ChromeOS, but its mobile availability will initially remain restricted to the United States.
Since the Chromium patch is still awaiting approval and has unresolved review comments, Google could make further changes before it reaches Chrome users.