Google has released AI Edge Eloquent, a new iPhone dictation app aimed at people who want cleaner voice-to-text without sending every session to a remote server. TechCrunch first spotted the launch, and both Apple's App Store listing and Google's own product page confirm the app is now available on iOS.

What launched

According to the App Store description, Eloquent uses Google's Gemma-based on-device stack to turn spoken notes into polished text, removing filler words and mid-sentence corrections automatically. The app also offers text transformation options such as key-point extraction and different writing styles, while keeping a searchable history of past dictation sessions.

Google's product page pitches Eloquent as "premium AI voice dictation without subscription" and says the app can clean up text on device before copying it to the clipboard. The App Store listing adds that some advanced features can use the cloud optionally, but the core pitch is local speech processing that still works offline.

Why it matters

The release gives Google a direct entry into the growing AI dictation category on mobile, where startups have been turning speech input into more structured writing rather than raw transcripts. It also fits Google's wider push around edge AI and practical Gemma deployments on consumer devices.

For now, Eloquent is iPhone-only. Google's product page says the company is evaluating other platforms, while the App Store listing says a keyboard integration for iOS is coming soon.