Mitja Rutnik / Android Authority
AI-generated news may not be everyone’s cup of tea, but it certainly has its advantages. It’s particularly useful if you’re concerned about traditional news media bias, as summaries are generated by collating and analyzing the same story from across the political spectrum. It may not have the human touch, but it can do the job of 100 journalists at once when it comes to bringing together all the perspectives and combining them to provide a balanced view.
These types of applications are an emerging market and their quality is still unpredictable. Even Gemini struggles in this pursuit. If you’re interested in trying AI news apps, these are some of the best options available right now.
Which AI news app do you think is best?
3 votes
NewsBang

While many news apps focus solely on condensing the day’s headlines, NewsBang wants to help you understand them on a deeper level. The AI Cognition Engine turns information into knowledge, using multiple AI models to compare how different media covers the same story. The goal, as the company puts it, is to “Transform news into value” and, as a result, help you make better decisions.
Start your day with a Morning Briefing – an AI-powered summary of the biggest stories from a wide range of trusted sources. From there, the briefing provides a clear summary of the top stories and you can move from each one to the Insights section, where NewsBang’s proprietary model generates guided questions to deepen your understanding. Swiping again will take you to that story’s Opinions section, which shows recent views and crowd sentiment from both sides of the debate. The Analysis section provides further insight and, for ongoing events, timelines allow you to follow the news as it develops.
NewsBang’s proprietary model generates guided questions to deepen your understanding.
There is a strong interactive element that will help you delve deeper. PodTalk, for example, works as a dynamic AI podcast that breaks down the story and can answer your questions in real time. The Ask About News tool goes further and lets you query stories directly for concise explanations tailored to your interests.
And if you like a challenge, NewsBang’s monthly “Predict the Month” contest lets you predict major global events for a chance to win prizes. If you’re ready to put your foresight to the test, the November Prediction Challenge begins at the beginning of the month, with the chance to win some money if you’re right about impending events.
let me know

LetMeKnow is one of the newest AI-powered news apps on the Play Store, but it already feels impressively polished. It does a great job of pulling together similar stories from thousands of sources, summarizing them with clear bullet points and brief AI-written summaries. It draws on all sides of the debate by default, but when setting it up, you can choose to keep or filter Right, Right, Center, Left, or Left feeds if you prefer.
Each group of stories shows all the media that covered the topic, complete with partial tags and links to the originals, adding a nice layer of transparency. There’s also an active discussion section with comments and polls, allowing you to see how other readers interpret the same story.
It has ads, but a seven-day free trial is available for the ad-free version, which is a cost-effective option if you decide to keep it. While many apps now offer AI summaries, LetMeKnow’s political filtering and community discussion features make it one of the most attractive new options for readers.
Particle News

Particle is one of the most established AI-based news apps available and has earned a 4.8 star rating on the App Store. Unfortunately, it’s currently only for iOS, so Android users can’t try it yet.
The app takes a holistic approach to summarizing news, combining coverage from multiple sources, AI-generated bullet points, and interactive features that help readers quickly understand complex stories. You can choose from several summary styles, such as “Explain Like You’re 5,” “The 5 Questions,” or “Opposite Sides,” which compares how media across the political spectrum frame the same event. Each summary also includes a political bias chart and links to the full source articles for further reading.
Choose from several summary styles, such as “Explain like you’re 5,” “The 5 Questions,” or “Opposite Sides.”
Particle also lets you ask questions about stories and get AI-generated answers, and you can listen to a personalized stream of spoken recaps for hands-free updates. If it ever releases on Android, it would probably be one of the strongest options for non-iOS readers.
Earth news

Ground News is somewhat low-key about its use of AI, perhaps acknowledging that some users may find it off-putting, but it uses the technology effectively. The platform ingests around 60,000 articles per day from more than 50,000 outlets, merging them into groups that show multiple perspectives on the same event. Each group includes AI-generated summaries that are subject to review by human editors, giving you a quick idea of what really happened before delving into the details.
You’ll also find context, such as proprietary data, source credibility scores, and tools to identify unreported “blind spots.” A built-in comparative view lets you see how the same topic is framed according to different political leanings, while the browser extension can even analyze the bias of articles shared on social media.
Ground News is available on both Android and iOS, with free access for general use and optional subscriptions for deeper analysis. It is a fairly transparent news platform that primarily uses AI as an organizational tool, rather than a narrator, which helps it focus on the facts.
I came back

Volv makes its selling point clear from the start, with the tagline “Be dangerously well-informed in 9-second reads.” It looks like an AI news app for the TikTok generation. The setup is a little different, too, framing the onboarding process as a WhatsApp-style chat that tailors your feed to the topics you’re interested in.
An artificially intelligent news app for the TikTok generation.
Once inside, you’ll find AI-generated news snippets that fit on a single screen, each summarizing stories from outlets like CNN, The Washington Post, and Vogue. It’s a mix of breaking news, online trend discussions, lifestyle articles and social media moments, all condensed into quick, scrollable cards. You can also follow creator profiles to read newsletter content from platforms like Substack or Morning Brew without cluttering your inbox.
With a 4.4-star rating from nearly 2,000 reviews on the Play Store, Volv has found an audience among readers who want to stay informed at a surface level. The AI’s writing can sometimes seem relaxed, but that’s part of its design: it’s news as a source of quick hits rather than deep dives. If you prefer to read the day’s stories in minutes rather than hours, Volv offers exactly that.
These are five of the best AI news apps available right now, but new ones are emerging so quickly that you may have already discovered a great alternative. Feel free to share your discovery in the comments section below.
Thank you for being part of our community. Please read our Comment Policy before posting.
