Google turned Google Earth into a free flight simulator on June 12, 2026 — and it runs entirely in your browser. No download, no subscription, no powerful gaming rig required. You open the site, click through a couple of menus, and you are in the cockpit.
The feature has roots going back to 2007, when a hidden Easter egg appeared in Google Earth 4.2 for desktop. Most people never found it. The new web version drops those barriers and opens it to anyone with a laptop and a decent internet connection. Google labels it experimental, meaning it can change — but right now it is live and free for all global users.
The @googleearth post on X announcing the feature drew over 5.5 million views within days of launch. Among the comments: “Finally I can crash a jet into my own house in 4K resolution directly from a browser tab.” That about covers the mood. Below is the full breakdown — what the two aircraft feel like, how the controls work, and how to keep your plane in the air long enough to actually see something.
Google Earth Put a Free Flight Sim
Right in Your Browser
Launched June 12, 2026 · Experimental · Web-only · No app required
Pick Your Aircraft
Two Planes, Two Very Different Rides
Tap a card to see the specs for each aircraft. First timers: start with the SR22.
F-16 Fighting Falcon
Military fighter jet · Fast & sensitive
Cirrus SR22
Single-engine prop · Slow & forgiving
Flight Controls
Every Key You Need to Stay in the Air
Full controls documented on the Google Earth help page. Standard map shortcuts are deactivated during flight to avoid conflicts.
Step-by-Step
How to Launch Your First Flight
What to Know Before You Fly
Common Issues and Quick Fixes
Why does the world look blurry at high speed?
I keep losing the horizon and going into a spin.
The terrain flickers or clips near the ground.
Can I use a joystick with the web version?
Does it work on mobile or tablet?
Ready to take off? It is free and in your browser right now.
Open Google Earth on web → Explore Earth → Tools → Flight Simulator. No sign-in required.
The Google Earth browser flight simulator has been covered here in the context of its June 12, 2026 launch, the two aircraft available (F-16 Fighting Falcon and Cirrus SR22), the keyboard controls, and the known limitations of the current experimental build. For fans of games with deep control systems or anyone who has spent hours in open-world titles, this is a surprisingly capable free tool accessible from any browser tab.
The experimental label means Google can pull or change the feature without notice. If you have been curious about it, trying it sooner is better. For more gaming and tech coverage, see The Game Tribune’s reports on the PS Plus June 2026 game catalog, the Wuthering Waves × Cyberpunk: Edgerunners collab, and upcoming releases including Harry Potter: Defenders of Hogwarts and Persona 4 Revival.