Apple will pay Google roughly $1 billion annually to integrate Gemini AI into Siri, but that's a fraction of the $20 billion Google pays Apple to remain the iPhone's default search engine.
The deal highlights that AI models are becoming commoditized -- Apple can swap providers, while its grip on 2 billion iPhone users remains unshakable.
Apple is spending just $12.7 billion on AI capital expenditures compared to Alphabet's $90 billion, yet it's gaining access to state-of-the-art AI without bearing most of the development costs.
On Jan. 12, 2026, Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) and Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) (NASDAQ: GOOG) announced a deal that will see Google's Gemini AI model power a smarter Siri. The price tag is rumored to be roughly $1 billion a year, though neither company has confirmed terms.
On its face, it looks like a confirmation that Apple is painfully behind in the AI space race. I disagree. I think Apple is the winner. Here's why.
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Google gets a high-margin licensing fee on a model it already built, so there's no major new spending attached. It also gets bragging rights of a sort -- Apple, a company known for its obsession with quality, picked Gemini over OpenAI's ChatGPT and Anthropic's Claude. That means something.
On the other hand, $1 billion a year is a drop in the bucket for a company with annual sales of more than $400 billion. And it's only 5% of the payment Google makes to Apple for the privilege of remaining the default search engine on the iPhone.
The disparity here is revealing. If Google lost that default search slot, it would be locked out of the search traffic from more than 1.5 billion of the most valuable devices on earth -- a gut punch to its core business. If, on the other hand, Apple swapped Gemini out for OpenAI's GPT, Anthropic's Claude, or even China's DeepSeek, the average iPhone owner would likely not notice.
It shows that AI models are more or less a commodity -- an interchangeable part Apple can shop for and replace, while Apple's hold on its customers is anything but.
Internal evaluations reportedly showed Siri flubbing complex requests about a third of the time. It's clear that by incorporating Gemini, Apple will be able to greatly improve its products and the user experience.
Apple needed a fix, and it got it. $1 billion a year isn't cheap, but it pales in comparison to the investment Google has pumped into developing Gemini. Apple gets an immediate fix while it works to perfect its own in-house model.
And -- in stark contrast to the rest of big tech -- it does this with remarkable discipline. Apple's AI capital spending in 2025 was about $12.7 billion. Alphabet spent roughly $90 billion.
In my view, Apple has positioned itself perfectly to reap the rewards of state-of-the-art AI without most of the cost of creating it. So, while many people say Apple is falling behind in AI, I say it's right where it needs to be. I think this deal confirms it.
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Johnny Rice has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet and Apple. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.