I would love for Kagi to add a feature similar to Google’s “Knowledge Panel.”
When searching for a specific person, organization, brand, or public figure, Kagi could display a clean, structured information box at the top/right side of the results. This would make it easy to get key facts at a glance without having to open multiple links.
Users would use a people/organization knowledge panel to get instant, trustworthy facts without opening multiple links. For example, if someone searches “Elon Musk,” they can immediately see a short summary, key facts (date of birth June 28, 1971; profession entrepreneur/CEO), education/studies (University of Pennsylvania — BA in Physics and BS in Economics) , notable work (founder of SpaceX, CEO of Tesla) , and links to official sources. This reduces time-to-answer and improves quick fact-checking.
The panel also supports task completion: users can open his official website, social links, or job titles directly from the panel. Students, journalists, and researchers benefit from clear source attribution and one-click access to authoritative references.
It also helps with exploration. Users can open “Related” items (e.g., companies he founded: SpaceX, Tesla, Neuralink) or expand sections like timelines or “Education and early career” to dive deeper without leaving the search page. If a search term is ambiguous (e.g., “Musk”), the panel can offer alternative entities (e.g., “Musk family”, “Musk the term”) so users can switch with one click.
This works similarly to how Google Knowledge Panels, Bing entity cards, DuckDuckGo Instant Answers, and Wikipedia infoboxes surface structured summaries to speed up discovery.
The feature would integrate smoothly into Kagi by appearing at the top or side of results, with optional AI summaries, transparent sourcing, and the ability to save panels into Collections. It strengthens Kagi’s existing search experience by making factual queries—especially those about biographies, education, and organizations—faster, clearer, and easier to act on.