Oracle and Google Cloud have expanded their partnership so Oracle customers can tap Google’s latest Gemini family directly from Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) and across Oracle’s business applications. Announced on August 14, 2025, the deal aims squarely at “agentic AI” use cases—bringing planning, tool use, and multimodal generation into day-to-day enterprise workflows.
What’s new: Oracle says it will make “the entire range” of Google’s Gemini models available through OCI Generative AI, via new integrations with Vertex AI. That includes models specialized for text, image, video, speech and even music generation, with the initial rollout starting from Gemini 2.5. In other words, teams can compose end-to-end agents—retrieve data, reason over it, and produce rich outputs—without leaving Oracle’s cloud.
Enterprise reach matters here. Beyond developer access in OCI, Oracle notes that customers of its finance, HR, and supply-chain applications will be able to infuse Gemini capabilities into daily processes—think automated close packages, job-description drafting, supplier-risk summaries, or multimodal incident explainers. The practical promise: fewer swivel-chair handoffs between tools and more AI-assisted outcomes where people already work.
Buying and operating model: Reuters reports customers will be able to pay for Google’s AI tools using Oracle’s cloud credit system, preserving existing procurement and cost controls. That seemingly small detail removes a classic blocker (separate contracts and billing) and makes experimentation less painful for IT and finance.
Why this partnership, and why now?
• For Oracle, it broadens choice. OCI already aggregates multiple model providers; adding Gemini gives customers a top-tier, multimodal option for agentic patterns without forcing a provider switch.• For Google Cloud, it’s distribution. Gemini lands in front of Oracle’s substantial enterprise base, expanding Google’s AI footprint in accounts where the “system of record” lives in Oracle apps.
What you can build first
- Multimodal service agents: ingest PDFs, images, and call transcripts from Oracle apps; draft actions and escalate with verifiable citations.
- Supply-chain copilots: analyze shipments, supplier news, and inventory images; generate risk memos with recommended mitigations.
- Finance and HR automations: summarize ledger anomalies, produce policy-compliant narratives, or generate job postings with skills mapping—then loop a human approver before commit. (All of these benefit from Gemini’s text, image, audio/video understanding and generation.)
How it fits technically
The integration path leverages Vertex AI on Google Cloud as the model layer, surfaced to OCI Generative AI so Oracle developers and admins keep a single operational pane—policies, observability, and quotas—while calling Gemini under the hood. Expect standard SDK patterns, prompt templates, and agent frameworks to be published as the rollout matures.Caveats and open questions
Availability timing by region, specific pricing tiers, and which Gemini variants (e.g., long-context or domain-tuned models) will be enabled first weren’t fully detailed in the initial announcements. Regulated industries will also look for guidance on data residency and cross-cloud traffic flows as deployments move from pilots to production. For now, the “pay with Oracle credits” and “build inside OCI” signals are strong green lights for proofs of concept.