The agreement strengthens technical and commercial ties as Palo Alto migrates workloads and adopts Google’s Vertex AI and Gemini models.
Palo Alto Networks and Google Cloud announced a multibillion-dollar agreement on Friday that expands an existing strategic partnership between the two tech giants.
Aimed at helping enterprises securely accelerate cloud and AI initiatives, the deal marks a deepening of the technical and commercial ties between the two companies. As part of the agreement, Palo Alto Networks will migrate key internal workloads to Google Cloud and will utilize Google’s Vertex AI platform and Gemini large language models (LLMs) to power its own security copilots.
Enhanced Network and Cloud Defense
The companies are integrating Palo Alto’s Prisma AIRS (AI Security) platform directly into Google Cloud’s developer ecosystem, with the partnership also involving deeper integration of core security infrastructure:
- Software Firewalls: Palo Alto’s VM-Series firewalls will be optimized for Google Cloud to provide deep packet inspection across public and hybrid environments.
- Global SASE Connectivity: Palo Alto Networks’ Prisma Access will leverage Google’s global network and Cloud Interconnect, allowing remote workers to access AI applications with reduced latency and consistent security policies.
- Operational Streamlining: The companies have committed to engineering pre-vetted solutions to reduce the “operational friction” often associated with deploying third-party security in cloud environments.
Financial and Market Impact
The agreement scales a relationship that has already seen over $2 billion in sales through the Google Cloud Marketplace. By embedding security tools directly into the Google Cloud fabric, the two firms aim to provide a “single pane of glass” for security teams managing complex, multi-cloud footprints.
Vague Financial Terms
While the announcement was framed as a “landmark agreement,” specific financial details remain sparse. Both companies characterized the deal only as a “multibillion-dollar” commitment, declining to provide a precise dollar amount or a specific timeframe for the contract’s duration. This lack of transparency is common in large-scale cloud partnerships, though it leaves industry analysts to speculate on the exact scale of the hardware commitment versus the software integration costs.

