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Home Android

The secret Gemini integration in Google Sheets means I never have to manually format a budget again

April 22, 2026
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Formatting a budget is near the bottom of my list of favorite things to do.

The task itself isn’t hard, but it’s made up of so many tiny, repetitive steps that I start to lose attention halfway through. It’s just the kind of busywork I’d dump on an AI tool without thinking twice.

I’d been keeping an eye on Gemini in Google Sheets since it first showed up as a Workspace add-on, and I’ll admit my first impression was lukewarm. It could pull insights from spreadsheets I’d already made, but couldn’t really build much on its own.

However, something has changed this year. Let’s see what that shift looks like when you sit down to use Gemini, specifically through the “Help me organize” feature.


I started using Gemini in Google Sheets, and it’s been a game-changer

Cutting my spreadsheet workload in half

What Gemini can now do in Google Sheets

The scope has widened beyond what it launched with

A gif showing how Gemini can now create charts in Google Sheets. Credit: Google

Gemini has completely revamped my Sheets workflow in the last year or so with a steady stream of updates, including formula help that made formulas feel optional.

The bigger change, though, is that Gemini is no longer an expensive optional extra. It’s now available in Workspace and Google One AI plans by default, which means the integration is tighter than it used to be.

What this looks like in practice is an assistant that can generate entire table structures, organize them, visualize the data, and keep working on follow-ups instead of one-off prompts.

Google Docs icons floating around Gemini logo.


I thought Google Docs was enough until I paired it with Gemini

The secret weapon for flawless documents

How Help me organize works

One icon, one prompt box, and one editable table

A gif showing Gemini working in Google Sheets

The entry point is a small icon in the upper-left corner of a blank sheet labeled Help me organize.

Clicking it opens a prompt box where you describe what you want in plain English (or any supported language), and Gemini drafts the structure inside an actual, editable table.

Which brings me back to my budget formatting.

Last quarter, building my quarterly budget template meant I had to pick a starting point, wrestle with column headers, set up categories, add formula rows, and then go back to fix all the things I forgot the first time. An easy afternoon’s work, right?

Now, I simply type something like

Quarterly household budget with categories for fixed expenses, variable expenses, savings, and discretionary spending, plus columns for planned, actual, variance, and notes.

Gemini then creates a ready-to-use table within seconds. It’s not perfect, but it’s already 70% to 80% of the way there.

The formatting is where I found it most valuable. With a single follow-up prompt, I can request alternating row colors for the expense categories, a bold header row, and currency formatting on all money columns. And I didn’t have to open the Format menu once.

It also handles conditional logic cleanly. A prompt like “highlight any row where actual spending exceeds planned by more than 10% in red” sets up the conditional formatting rule, correctly scoped to the right columns, and automatically applied to new entries.

What I didn’t expect was how well it handles follow-ups in general. I could ask it to add a priority column or flag any category where variance exceeds 10%, and it works inside the same conversation without rewriting the prompt from scratch.

Help me organize versus the alternatives

I ran the same budget prompt through the other AI tools I use

comparison between Gemini, ChatGPT, and Claude on Android Credit: Lucas Gouveia / Android Police

Before I got too comfortable, I wanted to know whether I’d wasted my time waiting for Gemini when I could have used something else.

I ran the same setup through Copilot and Claude, which are two other AI tools I use regularly.

Copilot built a table, but the output needed more cleanup than Help me organize did, and it didn’t feel meaningfully faster than doing the work myself.

Then I tried Claude, and while I like it for editing tasks, it doesn’t have the same native hook into Sheets, so everything ended up as a copy-paste mess.

ChatGPT was the most interesting comparison since it’s strong at spreadsheet math thanks to its Python sandbox. But strong is not the same as smooth, and I faced the same friction as with Claude.

Uploading a sheet, getting the output back, and then reformatting it in Sheets added enough steps that the time savings disappeared.

Help me organize isn’t the smartest of the four, but it’s the only one living inside the tool where I actually do the work.

I looked at some official benchmark numbers and was delighted to be vindicated.

In March, Google announced that Gemini in Sheets hit a 70.48% success rate on SpreadsheetBench, a public benchmark that tests AI models on complex, multistep spreadsheet editing tasks.

This means that for simple budget formatting tasks like mine, there’s an extremely low chance that there will be any mistakes.

comparison between Gemini, ChatGPT, and Claude on Android


I tried Gemini, ChatGPT, and Claude for a month on Android, and I have a clear winner for you

The ultimate Android AI showdown

It’s still not perfect

Limitations show up when tasks become more complex

Using Gemini to change date format in Google Sheets

A 70% success rate sounds great until you consider what the other 30% looks like.

Help me organize is fine for casual budget work, but a finance professional running this on mission-critical numbers is going to catch mistakes, and they’ll catch enough of them to really matter.

There’s also the (not so) tiny issue of UI optimization lagging behind the feature.

When the sidebar is open and Gemini is actively generating, your usable sheet area shrinks noticeably. On a 13-inch laptop screen, that’s really cramped.

Also, the floating prompt icons often sit on top of the cells you’re trying to read, which is annoying and undermines the whole “seamless integration” advantage.

One more thing worth mentioning is that Help me organize likes to fill in sample data when it builds a table, even when I didn’t ask for it.

Now, I’ve learned to tell it upfront to leave the cells empty — a small workaround, but a workaround all the same.

What it means for everyday spreadsheet work

Worth using now, even with the rough edges

For all the unique ways to use Sheets, Help me organize has been a real time-saver for me, and my budget sheets are the clearest example of that.

It’s not enterprise-ready, the UI gets in its own way, and the error rate isn’t low enough for high-stakes work. But if you want to turn a blank sheet into something usable within seconds, there’s no other AI tool that does it better than Gemini.

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