Breaking: Flutter Goes Full-Stack with Dart for Firebase Functions at Google Cloud Next 2026

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Google Cloud Next 2026: Flutter and Dart Take Center Stage

LAS VEGAS — Google Cloud Next 2026 opened with a seismic shift for Flutter developers: Dart now supports Firebase Functions, enabling full-stack development in a single language. The preview was announced during the developer keynote by Emma Twersky, signaling a major step forward for the framework.

Breaking: Flutter Goes Full-Stack with Dart for Firebase Functions at Google Cloud Next 2026

“This is a game-changer for teams that want to use Dart from the frontend all the way to the backend,” said Emma Twersky, Developer Advocate at Google. “It reduces context switching and speeds up delivery by allowing developers to reuse logic and share types across the stack.”

Full-Stack Dart: Firebase Functions Preview

The new Dart support for Firebase Functions lets developers write cloud functions entirely in Dart. Combined with the Dart Admin SDK for deeper Firebase integrations, teams can now build and deploy server-side logic without leaving the Flutter ecosystem.

“We’ve heard loud and clear that Dart developers want to own their entire stack,” said Andrew Brogdon, Flutter Product Manager. “This preview is the first step toward making that vision a reality.” A full breakout session covering the feature is scheduled for Google I/O.

AI-Powered Onsite Experiences: GenLatte and GenUI

At the expo, the Flutter team showcased GenLatte, an AI-powered coffee shop built entirely with Flutter’s GenUI. Attendees ordered specialty lattes via a GenUI Flutter app, watched baristas craft drinks, and received custom foam art generated by nanobanana AI.

“GenLatte is a taste of what’s possible when you combine generative AI with Flutter’s UI capabilities,” said Kate Lovett, Flutter Developer Advocate. “The response was overwhelming.”

Agentic Demos and Enterprise Stories

The expo floor featured three live demos highlighting Fullstack Dart, GenUI, and a special appearance from the Very Good Ventures team. The Partiful app showed real-time UI generation driven by user input.

In the developer keynote, Toyota and Talabat took the stage to share real-world successes. Toyota is using Flutter to build next-generation infotainment systems, while Talabat leverages the framework to innovate faster across the Middle East. “Flutter has become a strategic part of our digital transformation,” said a Toyota executive.

Session Highlights: Generative UI and Full-Stack Dart

Yegor Jbanov and Andrew Brogdon led a deep dive on generative UI, demonstrating how agents can create their own interfaces beyond text-based chatbots. The session will be available on the Flutter YouTube channel after Google I/O.

Meanwhile, Rody Davis and Kevin Moore presented “Building Full-Stack Dart,” showing developers how to get started with the new Firebase Functions integration. “We’re just scratching the surface of what Dart can do on the server,” Davis said.


Background

Google Cloud Next is an annual conference gathering over 30,000 developers and IT leaders. Flutter, Google’s open-source UI toolkit, has rapidly expanded from mobile to web and now server-side development. This year’s event marks the first official preview of Dart on Firebase Functions, a response to long-standing developer requests.

What This Means

For developers, the announcement means they can now build complete applications—from UI to database triggers—entirely in Dart. This reduces the need to learn multiple languages and streamlines tooling. For enterprise adopters like Toyota and Talabat, deeper Firebase integration offers faster iteration and lower maintenance costs.

As Emma Twersky put it: “Flutter is part of Google Cloud’s big bet on the future of agents. Full-stack Dart makes that bet even stronger.”

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