Palantir partners with Google Cloud to enhance platform integrations and marketplace access

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Palantir Technologies just locked in a partnership with Google Cloud that goes well beyond a simple marketplace listing. Announced at AIPCon 10 in Miami on June 4, the deal establishes two-way data pipelines between the companies’ core platforms and connects Palantir’s AI tools directly to Google’s Gemini models.

For a company now valued at $341 billion, the move signals that Palantir’s cloud distribution strategy is entering a new gear. It also means organizations already running on Google Cloud infrastructure can tap into Palantir’s analytics stack without ripping out what they’ve already built.

What the deal actually includes

The partnership has several layers worth unpacking. First, Palantir’s products will now be available through the Google Cloud Marketplace.

The more technically interesting piece is the integration work happening underneath. The deal creates bidirectional data connections between Palantir Foundry and Google BigQuery, so data can flow freely in both directions between the two platforms.

There’s also a semantic layer to the integration. Foundry’s Ontology, which is Palantir’s system for mapping how different data objects relate to each other, will now exchange information with Google’s Knowledge Catalog.

Finally, Palantir’s AI Platform (AIP) gains enhanced connectivity to Google’s Gemini models, meaning customers using Palantir’s decision-making tools can leverage Google’s latest generative AI capabilities natively.

The broader cloud chess match

This isn’t Palantir’s first cloud marketplace rodeo. Foundry is already available on AWS, Azure, and Oracle Cloud. Adding Google Cloud completes a near-sweep of major cloud providers.

The two companies aren’t strangers, either. Previous collaborations have spanned commercial and public-sector work across retail, financial services, and supply chain verticals. In April 2025, the partnership expanded when Palantir’s FedStart offering launched on Google Cloud for public-sector customers, giving government agencies another pathway to Palantir’s tools.

Palantir’s growth numbers help explain why Google would want to deepen this relationship. The company reported 68% revenue growth over the past 12 months leading up to the announcement, a rate that would be impressive for a startup and is remarkable for a company with a $341 billion market cap.

What this means for investors

This matters for Palantir’s customer acquisition math. Every cloud marketplace listing is essentially a new distribution channel with pre-qualified buyers. Organizations purchasing through Google Cloud Marketplace can often draw from existing cloud spending commitments, which lowers the friction of adopting new tools.

Market reaction to the announcement was mixed during AIPCon, where multiple updates were shared in quick succession.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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