OpenAI is putting Google Translate on notice: It now has a dedicated ChatGPT Translate webpage that can convert writing in 50 languages. At first glance, it looks like a basic text-to-text translator that resembles Google Translate and other simple language translation tools on the web. But scrolling down the page reveals more about OpenAI’s ambitions for Translate.

You’ll come across a line that mentions adding voice or an image (for instance, a photo of a sign) to get a translation, although the page doesn’t indicate when those capabilities will become available.

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OpenAI’s breakout of Translate comes as its chief competitor, Google, is aggressively deploying AI to support features such as live translations via headphones and new language-learning tools. In 2024, Google added 110 languages to its translations.

Language translation is a hot field in artificial intelligence. At CES 2026 last week, for instance, CNET’s Macy Meyer tried out a phone-sized device and companion headphones that let her carry on a live conversation with a Polish speaker even though she doesn’t speak Polish herself.

Screenshot of the translation windows on the ChatGPT Translate page.

ChatGPT’s translation features now have their own webpage at chatgpt.com/translate. The page is basic and it directs you to ChatGPT’s main conversation tool once a translation is done.

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The skills that ChatGPT Translate currently provides are already available in the chatbot itself. In fact, once you translate text on the webpage, ChatGPT offers a set of sample prompts as one-click buttons for what you can do with that text, such as “translate this and make it sound more fluent” or “translate this as if you’re explaining it to a child.”

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Selecting one of those prompts takes you to a ChatGPT conversation where options like image uploads are readily available. 

A representative for OpenAI did not comment directly on the new webpage, but said the company is working to make ChatGPT’s language skills “even better,” citing a new standard it uses to help evaluate how AI systems perform across different languages and cultures in India.

(Disclosure: Ziff Davis, CNET’s parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)