Google is building a Skills Marketplace for Gemini Enterprise, a hub where teams can pick from predefined AI "skills" instead of configuring each capability by hand. The feature surfaced in a June 13, 2026 app teardown by TestingCatalog, which found three connected pieces taking shape inside the product: a skills management view, a Skills Builder, and the marketplace itself.
What Happened
The marketplace sits inside Gemini Enterprise, Google's push to fold its scattered AI tools into a single surface. Early access is limited to select organizations. The same teardown found Google wiring Android Studio directly into the platform so users can build apps from natural-language prompts, and the Skills Builder is the piece that lets teams create their own skills rather than only installing the ones Google ships. Google has not announced pricing or a public launch date, and the teardown reflects code that is still in development, so the final feature set could shift before release.
Why It Matters
"Skills" are reusable packets of specialist knowledge that an AI agent loads only when a task needs them, which keeps prompts focused and repeatable. Google already publishes an official Agent Skills repository and ships a skill-creator tool in the Gemini CLI, so a built-in marketplace would turn that open standard into a one-click install for non-developers. For creators, that is the difference between retyping the same setup prompt every session and saving it once as a skill the whole team can run.
Key Details
The Agent Skills standard already runs in other tools, including coding agents on the Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform. We covered how Xcode 27 Agent Skills work in Claude and Cursor, and Gemini's marketplace would extend that pattern to Google's enterprise stack. Because the feature is still gated to a handful of organizations, the marketplace layout, the pricing, and whether it ever reaches consumer Gemini tiers are all unconfirmed.
What to Do Next
If you build repeatable AI workflows, start documenting your best prompts as discrete, single-purpose steps now, because that is exactly the shape a skill takes. Watch for a Skills Marketplace tab to appear in your Gemini Enterprise admin console, and test the Skills Builder on one narrow task, such as a brand-voice rewrite or a research summary, before rolling it out to a full team. Keep your prompts portable, since the same Agent Skills format already works across Gemini CLI and other tools, which lets you reuse the work even if Google's marketplace stays enterprise-only.