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Home » Sundar Pichai’s Stanford’s 2026 Commencement Address (Transcript)

Sundar Pichai’s Stanford’s 2026 Commencement Address (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Google CEO Sundar Pichai’s Stanford’s 2026 Commencement Address, June 14, 2026.

Editor’s Note: In his 2026 Stanford commencement address, Sundar Pichai shares personal lessons on navigating life’s uncertainties and high-pressure expectations. He encourages graduates to embrace a perspective of “California optimism,” tackle difficult challenges, and pursue the paths that truly excite them.

Opening Remarks and Welcome

SUNDAR PICHAI: President Levin, Provost Martinez, trustees, senior class presidents, thank you for the invitation to address you today. And to the distinguished class of 2026, congratulations.

I must warn you all, this is only the second commencement speech I’ve ever given. The first was literally in my backyard. It was the spring of 2020, right in the middle of COVID and lockdowns. We were filming a YouTube commencement for the graduates who couldn’t have their own celebrations like this one.

When I look back on it, I see a time of great anxiety. I see the empty space where there should have been an audience. I see the haircut I gave myself right before filming. In fact, I really wish I could unsee it.

Today what I see in front of me is how graduations should be. Graduates celebrating together and with the people you love who have supported you on your journey. Your parents, relatives, friends, professors, and everyone who helped you reach this milestone. Let’s give them another round of applause. They deserve it.

I know not everyone you care about could be here. Many of you came from other parts of the country and the world as I had. And it’s not always possible for families to travel. In fact, this is the first time my mom and dad are attending a graduation ceremony I’m a part of. So let me say a special thanks to them and to my entire family here with me.

Advice on What Truly Matters

I know today is about giving you all advice, but people have also been giving me a lot of advice on what to say. It’s been the same advice and it’s about what not to say. People thought it would be really difficult for me. It’s the last two letters of my last name after all.

In all honesty, the topic is truly immaterial to what I want to share with you. The most timeless advice I’ve learned is technology agnostic. It’s about you, the life you want to build for yourself, and the choices that help you pursue that life.

Some of you know what you’re pursuing already. Congratulations. Enjoy closing down the Rosenkrantz now. It gets tougher with the day job. Many of you may have absolutely no clue. That’s okay, too.

I remember feeling uncertain on graduation day, the sense that life was a series of really big moments and the pressure I felt to get them all exactly right. This is especially true for a group of high achievers who have sweated every grade, every paper, every exam, who are focused on having the right mix of activities, athletics, internships, and now your first jobs.

I’m going to let you in on a little secret. While these things matter in the moment, they are much less consequential than you might think. You could have failed that biology test, skipped a class, never learned to play the tuba, and you’d still probably be here today.

A Road Trip Story: The Vegas Detour

Let me tell a story of how I started to learn this for myself. When I was a student here, I had a classmate named Pat. He was from Long Beach, had an earring in one ear, which I thought was really edgy at the time, and a white two-door Honda Prelude convertible.

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On Wednesday morning in January, my first winter quarter, we were on our way to class. He was like, “Do you want to go to Vegas instead?” I’d never skipped a class, I’d never definitely taken a road trip before. In fact, this is the first time my parents are hearing of it. And yet I said, “Sure.”

So we went back to our dorm rooms, grabbed some things and set off. You have to cut through the mountains to get there. As we drove through them, it started to snow. I had never seen snow before. I stuck my hand out to grab it. I couldn’t believe the softness of the flurries. Pat stopped the car so I could get out. It was really beautiful, a moment I’ll never forget.

Nine hours from when we set out, we arrived in Vegas with the night lights on the horizon.

Three Filters for Getting More Moments Right

I didn’t know what to think. Pat taught me how to play blackjack. I started with $5 and did manage to win about 15 more and was like, I’m out. We didn’t have enough money to stay long, so the next day we started the drive back. No one seemed to notice that we had missed class. For the first time, I realized the world won’t end if I relaxed a little.

You’re going to face a lot of moments in your life. Only a few of them are really important and you need to get them right. Picking a partner, choosing whether to start a family, a bigger career pivot, those decisions require time and intention. However, you will face many more moments in your life that only seem really big, thousands of them in fact, and very few of them are make or break. Your first job out of college, the city you move to next, whether to take that road trip. While those moments add texture to your journey, they rarely determine the course of your life. But if you’re able to filter the signal through the noise, you can nudge your life in these moments into having the impact you want.

So today I want to share three simple filters I’ve applied to my own life.