AI health platform CVS is the focus of a new partnership between CVS Health and Google Cloud. The companies say the platform, called Health100, will help consumers manage care through one connected digital experience.
CBS Chicago described Health100 as a free service that CVS plans to roll out, with support from Google Cloud. Reuters also reported that the platform will gather data from across the health system and offer real-time tools for health management.
CVS says Health100 will not limit itself to people who use a CVS pharmacy or health plan. Instead, the company wants to create a broader consumer-facing platform that can pull together information from many care settings.
The move reflects a wider industry push to make healthcare easier to navigate. Large health companies now use artificial intelligence to answer questions, route people to care, and reduce the administrative burden that often blocks treatment. That trend has accelerated as consumers expect healthcare tools to feel more like retail or banking apps.
What Health100 Is Supposed to Do
CVS says Health100 will run on Google Cloud technology, including Gemini models, Cloud Healthcare API, and BigQuery. The company says those tools will help combine data from pharmacies, insurers, providers, labs, and connected devices into a unified experience.
According to CVS, the platform uses a healthcare interoperability framework to connect different partners across the health ecosystem. It will also use multimodal AI to support clinical and transactional workflows, aiming to help with both care-related tasks and practical issues such as navigation and service access.
Reuters reported that Health100 is designed to offer real-time tools for people trying to manage their health. Becker’s Hospital Review added that CVS plans to let other health technology companies build specialized applications on the platform over time. That suggests CVS wants Health100 to become an open ecosystem rather than a single-purpose app.
The early description points to a platform that could help users find care, organize information, and interact through a conversational interface. In coverage of a Google Cloud briefing, CVS executive Tony Ambrozie said the main interface would feel like a consumer chatbot.
Why CVS is Betting on Artificial Intelligence
CVS has spent the last several years trying to integrate its pharmacy, insurance, and care-delivery businesses more closely. Health100 fits that strategy because it gives the company a digital front door for consumer engagement. Reuters said the partnership highlights the broader convergence of healthcare and technology as companies seek more personalized, accessible services.
Google Cloud provides AI infrastructure and data tools, while CVS brings clinical, pharmacy, and insurance relationships. CVS says the combined platform will rely on enterprise-grade security and privacy protections, while also supporting HIPAA compliance and patient data control.
That point matters because health AI platforms face immediate questions about trust. A system that collects data from many sources must not only work well, but also protect sensitive information. CVS and Google are clearly trying to position Health100 as both useful and secure.
The timing also matters for CVS. The company has been looking for new ways to improve growth and strengthen customer engagement. New digital tools can help large healthcare companies keep users inside their own systems for pharmacy, care, and insurance needs.
What to Watch as the Rollout Begins
CVS plans the initial Health100 launch for 2026, with more details expected at Google’s Check Up health event in March. So far, the companies have outlined the platform’s ambition more clearly than its exact consumer features.
That leaves several open questions. It is not yet clear how much personalization users will receive, which services will appear first, or how smoothly the platform will connect data from competing healthcare systems. Those details will matter if Health100 hopes to become a daily health tool instead of a one-time novelty.
For now, the clearest takeaway is that AI health platform CVS has become a major new consumer bet for the company. If Health100 works as planned, it could give patients a simpler way to track their care, ask questions, and navigate a fragmented health system. If it falls short, it will join a long list of digital health products that promised to simplify care but struggled to change real behavior.

