Google has officially stopped producing the Nest Mini and Nest Audio after introducing its new smart speaker, the Google Home Speaker. For longtime users, the most important detail is that their existing devices are not being switched off.
The two older speakers will still work as usual, including their current smart features. The real change is on the support side, where Google says future software support will be very limited.
What discontinued really means
In this case, discontinued does not mean the devices in homes are reaching the end of their usable life. It means Google will no longer manufacture new units of the Nest Mini and Nest Audio.
That distinction matters for users who already own one of the speakers. There is no urgent need to replace a device that still performs its daily tasks.
The bigger shift is in future support
The clearest impact for existing owners is not immediate functionality, but what comes next. With software support expected to be very limited, major updates and new features should not be expected from the older models.
Google confirmed the status of both products to Tech Advisor, making the change an official transition rather than a market rumor. The move also reflects a broader strategy shift away from a speaker line that had gone a long time without a refresh.
Google Home Speaker becomes the new focus
The Google Home Speaker is now positioned as the main successor in the lineup. Google appears to be using it to replace the older models rather than keep them alongside a growing range of overlapping options.
On paper, the new model is far more modern. It comes with a quad-core 2.0GHz processor with an NPU, 1GB of RAM, and 4GB of eMMC storage.
Audio hardware includes a 58 mm full-range driver, while voice pickup is handled by three far-field microphones. Google also adds a two-stage hardware mute switch and touch controls on the speaker body.
Built around Gemini for Home
A major part of the new direction is Gemini for Home, which is meant to make interaction with the speaker and connected devices feel more natural. That points to Google’s wider push to turn the speaker into a smarter home control hub.
The Google Home Speaker also supports Wi‑Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.4, placing it well ahead of the older generation in connectivity. Google has set the price at $100 and will offer four color choices.
For shoppers, the message is now straightforward. Nest Mini and Nest Audio are no longer in production, so new units will become harder to find through third-party retailers as remaining stock dries up.
For current owners, the devices still have a place in the home. The only clear warning is that the window for meaningful software support is narrowing as Google moves on to its new speaker platform.
Source: www.androidpolice.com






