Free Slack app for Google Meet

Start a Google Meet from Slack with one command

Meet for Slack is a Google Meet Slack integration built for teams that want meetings to start where the conversation already lives. Type /meet in Slack and a fresh Google Meet link appears instantly, using your own Google account.

1 slash command No copy and paste Works with Gmail and Google Workspace Free forever

Search intent matched

The Google Meet Slack integration people are actually looking for

If you searched for Google Meet Slack integration, Slack Google Meet app, or how to create a Google Meet link in Slack, this is the exact workflow: install the app once, connect Google once, then use /meet any time you need a room.

Create meeting links where work already happens

Stop jumping to Google Calendar just to create a room. The slash command keeps the meeting flow inside Slack, so conversations turn into calls immediately.

Use the right Google account every time

Meet links are created from the Google account you connect, which helps teams avoid the wrong profile, the wrong calendar, or an extra login prompt.

Useful for standups, sales calls, interviews, and incident response

Any time a conversation in Slack needs to become a Google Meet call, the command is ready. No setup friction for the rest of the room.

Simple enough for every workspace

Meet for Slack is free, lightweight, and focused on one job: help people create a Google Meet link in Slack as fast as possible.

Why it wins

Manual link sharing versus typing /meet

Manual flow

Open tabs, create the room, copy the link, paste it back

  • Switch from Slack to Google Calendar or Meet
  • Create a room or event manually
  • Copy the meeting URL
  • Return to Slack and paste it into the conversation

Meet for Slack

Type one command and keep the meeting in-channel

  • Stay inside the Slack thread, channel, or DM
  • Create a fresh Google Meet link from your Google account
  • Share the join button instantly with the whole conversation
  • Move from discussion to live call in seconds

How it works

Set it up once, then use it anytime

The first use handles installation and Google authorization. After that, the workflow is as simple as a slash command in Slack.

1

Add Meet for Slack to your workspace

Install Meet for Slack from the app page so the /meet slash command becomes available in your Slack workspace.

2

Run /meet in Slack

Open any Slack channel or direct message, then type /meet to start the flow.

3

Connect your Google account once

The first time you use the command, Meet for Slack asks you to connect the Google account that should create Google Meet links.

4

Post the Google Meet link instantly

After the account is connected, Meet for Slack creates a fresh Google Meet link and posts it back into Slack for the rest of the conversation.

Need the detailed walkthrough? Read how to start a Google Meet in Slack or browse the integration overview.

FAQ

Questions people ask before installing

Can I create a Google Meet link directly inside Slack?

Yes. Install Meet for Slack, type /meet in any Slack channel or DM, and the app posts a fresh Google Meet link created from your own Google account.

Does this work with Google Workspace and personal Gmail accounts?

Yes. Meet for Slack works with both Google Workspace accounts and personal Gmail accounts that have access to Google Meet.

Why is this better than pasting a Meet link manually?

It removes the extra steps. You do not need to open Google Calendar, create an event, copy a link, and paste it back into Slack. The slash command creates and shares the link in one flow.

Do other teammates need to connect their Google account too?

Only the person creating the meeting needs to connect Google. Everyone else can join the posted Google Meet link normally.

Is Meet for Slack free?

Yes. Meet for Slack is free to install and free to use, with no subscription fee and no credit card required.

Looking for setup help, troubleshooting, or policy details?

Start with the support page, the step-by-step guide, or the privacy policy. Every public page is server-rendered so search engines can crawl the full content without JavaScript.