- Google launches Gemini to the government specifically to the White House
- Government bodies pay only $ 0.47 to access Gemini tools
- The deal will only last until 2026 – what happens then?
Google and the US government are assembled to advertise the release of Gemini for the government, described as the combination of “commercial cloud, industry-leading gemini models and agent solutions” for maximum productivity.
The message comes from Google and General Services Administration (GSA) and forms part of the Onegov strategy for centralized IT purchases and Trump’s AI action plan.
Gemini for the government will be valid until 2026 and is based on existing Google agreements with the US government.
Google launches heavily reduced gemini for government
Gemini for the government costs $ 0.47 per Agency and follows a Google Workspace agreement with savings of 71% for state agencies -all activated through renewed purchasing power through GSA’s Onegov strategy.
“Building in our work area offering for federal employees, ‘Gemini for Government’ gives federal agencies access to our full power approach to AI -Innovation, including tools such as Notebooklm and VEO, driven by our latest models and our secure sky infrastructure to deliver their important missions,” commented Google CEO Sundar Picha.
Gemini for the government includes enterprise search in Google Quality, Video and Image Generation, Notebooklm AI, Deep Research Agents, Idea Generation Agents and Support for Workers to Build their own agents.
“We are a long -term strategic partner for America that is deeply invested in our government’s mission, innovation and security,” noted Google Public Sector CEO Karen Dahut, pointing to headline figures as Google’s 100,000+ US workers and its data centers and officers in 26 states.
With the agreement that will last only one year, it is unclear what happens. GSA could renew or extend the deal, or the competition could again open up as the White House looks for cheaper or other advanced AI tools.



