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How to share a page or Canvas you made in Gemini

June 9, 2026·5 min read

Gemini built you a page, a report, or an interactive one-pager in Canvas — and now you want to send it to a colleague or client. The catch: Gemini is great at making things and surprisingly limited at sharing them the way you actually need to. Here’s what it can do natively, and how to turn what you made into a real, controllable page.

Short answer
Gemini can share a link to the conversation or a public preview of a Canvas, but not a hosted page you control. To share the creation itself, ask Gemini for the full HTML, then host it on a sharing tool — you’ll get a clean link with access control and analytics that a bare public link can’t give you.

What Gemini lets you share natively

  • A public conversation link. Anyone with the link can read the chat without an account. Useful for showing your work — but it’s the conversation, not a standalone page.
  • A Canvas creation. When Gemini builds a page or app in Canvas, you can preview it, share a public link to it, or copy/export the content. That hands you the raw material — but the share is a bare public URL with no password, invite list, or analytics.
  • Export to Google Docs. Great for editing, but it’s a doc — not a hosted web page you can hand someone with a clean link.

The gap: a public link isn’t a controlled one

If someone just needs to glance at your prompt-and-response, the conversation link is fine. But when you made an actual artifact — a dashboard, a one-pager, a proposal — a bare public link means anyone who gets it can open it, you can’t require a password or limit it to certain people, and there’s no way to tell if anyone opened it.

How to share it as a real page

  • Get the HTML. Ask Gemini: “Give me the full, self-contained HTML for this Canvas.” Copy it (or export the file).
  • Host it on Shareable. Paste the HTML and publish — you get a clean link at once, and viewers never need an account.
  • Control and measure it. Set who can see it, and get view analytics plus an email when it’s opened.
Want the full landscape — including Claude, ChatGPT, Vercel, and Netlify? Read How to share an AI-generated page, doc, or PDF. On ChatGPT or Claude instead? See How to share a ChatGPT page or How to share a Claude artifact.

Frequently asked questions

How do I share something I made in Gemini?

Gemini gives you a few native options: share a public link to the conversation, export a Canvas creation, or send it to Google Docs. None of those is a hosted, standalone page of the thing you built with its own access control — so to share it as a real web page you take the HTML and host it somewhere. A sharing tool like Shareable gives you a link in seconds.

Can I share a Gemini Canvas as a web page?

A Canvas lives inside Gemini, and its share link is a bare public preview — anyone with it can open it, with no password, no invite list, and no view analytics. Ask Gemini to output the full self-contained HTML of what’s in the Canvas, then host that HTML to get a shareable page with its own link and access control.

Does a Gemini shared conversation link expire?

A public conversation link stays active until you delete it from your shared links, and it shows the chat as it was when you shared it — later messages aren’t included. It shows the conversation, though, not a standalone page of whatever you built.

Can people edit my shared Gemini chat?

No. A shared conversation link is view-only; recipients can read it and continue it in their own new chat, but they can’t change yours.

How do I share a PDF or doc from Gemini?

Gemini can export to Google Docs or hand you a file to download, not a hosted link you control. Email it, or upload it to a tool like Shareable — which hosts PDFs and images directly — to get a link with access control and view analytics, and see who opened it. See our full guide to sharing AI-generated pages, docs, and PDFs.

Share your next AI-made page in seconds

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