Google joins government AI discount frenzy, undercuts competition with $0.47 deal

It’s now safe to say the gang’s all here when it comes to big generative AI model makers signing dollar discount deals with Uncle Sam. Google has joined Anthropic and OpenAI, inking questionable short-term discount terms for government agencies. 

Not to be outdone by the makers of ChatGPT and Claude, who each agreed to sell their services to the government for $1 per agency, Google has agreed to even deeper discount terms, pitching its various government-capable AI products for just $0.47 per agency, valid through 2026. 

The half-a-buck Google AI deal is part of the General Services Administration’s OneGov purchasing strategy that seeks to streamline the purchasing of products for federal agencies. Agencies looking to add some Google Gemini AI to their operations, for instance, won’t need to establish new terms with Google under the $0.47 deal. Instead, they simply agree to terms previously negotiated on behalf of the whole federal government by the GSA. 

And like the other recent discount AI deals announced by GSA as part of its OneGov contracting initiative, Google’s also expires after a year. Agencies that sign up for discounted services today and become dependent on them have no way of knowing what comes after the discount period ends. Google told us that even though it is not sure, with a spokesperson only saying that it would explore options toward the end of the discount period.

As we pointed out in another OneGov story, these deals open the possibility of a new generation of vendor lock-in. Any particular brand of AI could quickly become indispensable to an agency’s workload before anyone knows what the long-term cost is.

That’s part of the reason both prior AI OneGov deals with OpenAI and Anthropic have been challenged by AI firm Ask Sage and its founder, former Air Force and Space Force Chief Software Officer Nicolas Chaillan. 

Ask Sage’s bid protests, copies of which have been viewed by The Register, argue that the discounts could lead to vendor lock-in in violation of the government’s Federal Acquisition Regulation, as well as violating requirements pertaining to commercial pricing and competition. Ask Sage, we note, provides a vendor-agnostic AI platform for government agencies and is protesting the bid as an interested party. 

Chaillan told The Register of a number of other concerns he has about the OneGov contracts that we’re still looking into, including the fact that the contracts with OpenAI and Anthropic are still private despite his asking as part of the bid protest process. Timely bid protests are grounds to halt an award, but Government Accountability Office dockets for the protest do not indicate whether that criterion has been met with regard to the OpenAI and Anthropic deals. 

“The $1 deal was already far outside the bounds of what could reasonably sustain secure, enterprise-grade AI for government,” Chaillan told us in an emailed statement. “Google’s 47-cent offer takes that even further. Pricing this low is not about serving agencies — it’s about forcing dependence on a single vendor, hiding future costs, and squeezing out fair competition. What looks cheap today will leave the government with higher costs, fewer options, and greater risk tomorrow.”

To add some additional concern to the Google Gemini deal, it won’t just come with the typical government-certified AI services, agentic bots, research tools and the like. The GSA took the time to spell out that government agencies were also getting “video and image generation capabilities” as part of the deal, if that’s the sort of thing that concerns you. 

The GSA didn’t respond to questions before publication. ®

Brandon Vigliarolo
Read More

Latest

Everything you need to know about Greek yogurt and how it can meet your nutrition needs

Recipes Two-ingredient cheesecake. Turkish-style pasta. Baked yogurt toast. Bagels....

Cook This: 3 recipes from Istanbul, including one of Turkey’s favourite breakfasts

Recipes Özlem Warren shines a light on the culinary...

Green Sauce Tofu and More Recipes We Made This Week

Recipes It’s no secret that Bon Appétit editors cook...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Everything you need to know about Greek yogurt and how it can meet your nutrition needs

Recipes Two-ingredient cheesecake. Turkish-style pasta. Baked yogurt toast. Bagels....

Cook This: 3 recipes from Istanbul, including one of Turkey’s favourite breakfasts

Recipes Özlem Warren shines a light on the culinary...

Green Sauce Tofu and More Recipes We Made This Week

Recipes It’s no secret that Bon Appétit editors cook...

Marshmallow Creme vs. Fluff: The Sweet and Sticky Showdown

Recipes Skip to main content Taste of Home Taste of Home Do...

13 Real Business Trip Stories That Prove Work Travel Collects More Stories Than Miles

Real business trips almost never go the way the itinerary promised. They start with a confidently-packed suitcase and an eight-page agenda, and somewhere between the airport gate and the hotel breakfast they quietly turn into something nobody could have invented — equal parts comedy, chaos, and unscheduled adventure. These 13 real business trip moments are exactly that kind of work-trip plot

Your business texts could look like scam messages from July 1 if you don’t act now

From July 1, any branded SMS your business sends without a registered sender ID will be labelled “Unverified” and grouped with scam messages.  What’s happening: From 1 July 2026, any business or organisation that sends SMS using a branded name, such as “MyShop” or “AcmeServices”, instead of a phone number, must have that sender ID

Business groups are fighting Labor’s CGT changes. Here is where SMEs stand

Labor’s most contested tax reform in a generation cleared its first formal hurdle on Thursday and immediately ran into organised resistance. Treasurer Jim Chalmers introduced the government’s tax reform legislation to the House of Representatives on 28 May, bundling together four budget measures: the capital gains tax overhaul, new limits on negative gearing, a $250