Since releasing Gemma 4 two months ago, we've been continuously working to expand its capabilities. First, we introduced Multi-Token Prediction (MTP) to accelerate inference, and just a couple of days ago, we released a 12B model to bridge the gap between our E4B and 26B MOE models.
Today, we are releasing new checkpoints optimized with Quantization-Aware Training (QAT) to make Gemma 4 even more efficient, so you can run models locally on everyday edge devices and consumer GPUs.
By simulating quantization during training, QAT minimizes quality loss when the model is compressed. This release includes QAT checkpoints for the popular Q4_0 quantization format as well as a novel quantization format specialized for mobile use cases. Using this mobile format, we’ve reduced the memory footprint of Gemma 4 E2B to 1GB. Together, these dramatically reduce memory requirements while preserving the capabilities and quality you expect from Gemma 4.
Keeping model quality while making them smaller
Quantization is a key technology to run models on consumer hardware by reducing their memory footprint while also accelerating decode speed. However, standard Post-Training Quantization (PTQ) often leads to performance degradation. Instead of simply quantizing the model after training, QAT integrates the quantization process directly into training. While PTQ is already effective at preserving quality, our QAT results yield even higher overall quality compared to standard PTQ baselines.
We applied this QAT recipe to the popular Q4_0 format to maximize performance for all the models. For the edge models (E2B and E4B), we rethought how we approach quantization with a special mobile-specialized quantization schema.
Saving on VRAM and Storage
Below are the approximate memory requirements indicating how much VRAM is required to load the models: