Palo Alto Networks on Friday said it will migrate key internal workloads to Google Cloud under a new multibillion-dollar agreement that significantly broadens and deepens an already extensive strategic partnership.
The deal highlights how cybersecurity and cloud computing are becoming inseparable as companies accelerate the adoption of artificial intelligence.
The agreement expands an existing relationship that has steadily grown over several years, positioning Palo Alto Networks more tightly within Google Cloud’s infrastructure and AI ecosystem at a moment when enterprises are grappling with how to deploy generative AI tools without exposing themselves to new categories of cyber risk.
As part of the deal, Palo Alto Networks is now using Google’s Gemini large language models to power its AI-driven security copilots, tools designed to help security teams detect, investigate, and respond to threats more quickly. The company is also relying on Google Cloud’s Vertex AI platform to build, train, and deploy AI models across its product suite, according to a joint release.
“Every board is asking how to harness AI’s power without exposing the business to new threats,” BJ Jenkins, president of Palo Alto Networks, said in a statement. “This partnership answers that question.”
The expanded collaboration goes beyond internal migration and product development. Palo Alto Networks and Google Cloud said the new phase of the partnership will allow joint customers to protect live AI workloads and sensitive data running on Google Cloud, enforce consistent security policies across cloud and hybrid environments, and simplify complex security architectures that often rely on multiple, disconnected tools.
The focus on securing AI workloads reflects a growing concern among enterprises that generative AI systems, AI agents, and large language models introduce unfamiliar vulnerabilities. These include risks around data leakage, model manipulation, prompt injection, and the exposure of proprietary or regulated information, challenges that traditional cybersecurity tools were not designed to address.
Palo Alto Networks already has more than 75 joint integrations with Google Cloud products and has completed roughly $2 billion in sales through the Google Cloud Marketplace, underlining the commercial importance of the partnership even before the latest expansion. The companies said the new agreement will deepen engineering collaboration, allowing teams on both sides to co-develop security capabilities directly within Google Cloud’s AI and infrastructure stack.
Migrating internal workloads to Google Cloud is also a strategic signal for Palo Alto Networks. The company gains firsthand experience securing large-scale AI systems, an experience it can then translate into products for customers facing similar challenges. The move also tightens Palo Alto Networks’ alignment with one of the world’s largest cloud providers as competition intensifies among security vendors to become the default layer for enterprise AI protection.
For Google Cloud, the partnership strengthens its positioning in enterprise security, a key battleground as it competes with rivals such as Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure. Security has increasingly become a deciding factor for large organizations choosing where to run mission-critical and AI-driven workloads, and alliances with established cybersecurity firms are central to that strategy.
“This latest expansion of our partnership will ensure that our joint customers have access to the right solutions to secure their most critical AI infrastructure and develop new AI agents with security built in from the start,” Google Cloud President Matt Renner said.
Market reaction to the announcement was measured. Shares of Palo Alto Networks rose about 1% on Friday, while Google shares were mostly flat, suggesting investors view the deal as strategically meaningful but consistent with broader trends in cloud and cybersecurity convergence.
More broadly, the agreement illustrates how the cybersecurity industry is evolving. Rather than selling standalone tools, leading firms are increasingly embedding their technologies directly into cloud and AI platforms, aiming to become foundational components of customers’ digital infrastructure. As enterprises move faster to deploy AI across operations, the ability to offer integrated, cloud-native security with AI built in from the outset is becoming a central differentiator.
In that context, the Palo Alto Networks–Google Cloud deal is not just an expansion of a partnership, but a reflection of how AI, cloud computing, and cybersecurity are converging into tightly linked ecosystems, with both companies seeking to lock in customers as AI adoption reshapes enterprise technology priorities.







