If you typed nanobannana, you are likely looking for the Nano Bannana website or a quick path to generate images, find prompts, or review pricing. This page exists to make that navigation simple and transparent while avoiding confusion about the model name "Nano Banana."
Important clarification: Nano Bannana is our product name and domain. "Nano Banana" is a name used for Google DeepMind's Gemini 2.5 Flash Image model. Nano Bannana is an independent service and is not affiliated with Google or Google DeepMind.
Search behavior is messy. People do not always type brand names the same way. Some users search "nano bannana," others type "nanobannana" as a single word, and others search "nano banana" because they are looking for the model name. This page helps route those different intents to the right destination without misleading language.
The goal is clarity:
Nano Bannana is an independent service that provides a workflow for generating images. It is not the model itself. The term "Nano Banana" refers to a model name used by Google DeepMind. This distinction matters because it affects how you interpret documentation and where you should look for official model information.
If you are researching the underlying model, use official sources from Google or Google DeepMind. If you are trying to generate consistent marketing visuals with a repeatable workflow, Nano Bannana is designed to help with that.
Choose the path that matches your intent:
Tip: Save the correct spelling in your bookmarks and share these hub links with your team. It keeps everyone aligned on the same source of truth.
When a model name becomes popular, many low-quality pages appear. To protect your time, use these criteria:
Nano Bannana aims to meet those criteria by keeping disclaimers visible and linking to clear, useful destinations.
Use these definitions if you are comparing sources:
Keeping these terms clear will reduce confusion when you read guides or evaluate tools.
Here are the most common intents we see:
If one of these sounds like you, use the links above to move faster.
If you are new, use this simple process:
This approach works better than experimenting with dozens of prompts because it minimizes drift and keeps results consistent.
If you are here because you saw the term "Nano Banana" in a product or social post, you probably want a clear explanation of what it is and where it appears. That is exactly what /nano-banana provides. It is a neutral, informational page that explains the model name, the common use cases, and the difference from this site.
If your goal is to produce a specific type of asset quickly, go to /nano-banana-prompts. The prompt library includes templates for product shots, ad variants, background swaps, realistic photos, and more. It is designed for repeatable output, not just inspiration.
Problem: I thought Nano Bannana was the model itself.
Fix: Nano Banana is the model name. Nano Bannana is an independent workflow site. Use /nano-banana for the model explanation.
Problem: I cannot find pricing details here.
Fix: Go directly to /pricing for the most current plan terms and credit validity rules.
Problem: I want to generate images now.
Fix: Use /ai-image-generator to start immediately.
Problem: I am not sure which page to start with.
Fix: If your intent is "learn," start at /nano-banana. If your intent is "do," start at /ai-image-generator.
Q1: Is nanobannana the same as nano bannana?
A: Yes. Nanobannana is a single-word spelling people use to find Nano Bannana. The official product name is Nano Bannana.
Q2: Is Nano Bannana affiliated with Google or Google DeepMind?
A: No. Nano Bannana is an independent service. "Nano Banana" is a model name used by Google DeepMind.
Q3: Where should I go for prompt templates?
A: /nano-banana-prompts is the prompt library hub.
Q4: Where can I see plan terms and credits?
A: /pricing is the source of truth for current plan details.
This page exists to reduce confusion and send you to the right place quickly. Use the navigation links above to move from curiosity to execution, and remember the model name distinction when you evaluate sources.