Perplexity AI made a US$34.5-billion unsolicited all-cash offer for Google’s Chrome browser on Tuesday, a bid far above its own valuation as the start-up reaches for the browser’s billions of users pivotal to the AI search race.
Run by Aravind Srinivas, Perplexity is no stranger to headline-grabbing offers: it made a similar one for TikTok US in January, offering to merge with the popular short-video app to resolve US concerns about TikTok’s Chinese ownership.
OpenAI, Yahoo and private-equity firm Apollo Global Management have also expressed interest in Chrome as regulatory pressure threatens Google’s grip on the industry.
Google did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The company has not offered Chrome for sale and plans to appeal a US court ruling last year that found it held an unlawful monopoly in online search. The US justice department has sought a Chrome divestiture as part of the case’s remedies.
Perplexity did not disclose on Tuesday how it plans to fund the offer. The three-year-old company has raised around $1-billion in funding so far from investors including Nvidia and Japan’s SoftBank. It was last valued at $14-billion.
Multiple funds have offered to finance the deal in full, Perplexity said, without naming the funds. Google parent Alphabet’s shares were up 1.6% in afternoon trading.
As a new generation of users turns to chatbots such as ChatGPT and Perplexity for answers, web browsers are regaining prominence as vital gateways to search traffic and prized user data, making them central to Big Tech’s AI ambitions.
Unlikely
Perplexity already has an AI browser, Comet, that can perform certain tasks on a user’s behalf and buying Chrome would allow it to tap the browser’s more than three billion users, giving it the heft to better compete with bigger rivals such as OpenAI. The ChatGPT parent is also working on its own AI browser.
Perplexity’s bid pledges to keep the underlying browser code called Chromium open source, invest $3-billion over two years and make no changes to Chrome’s default search engine, according to a term sheet seen by Reuters.
The company said the offer, with no equity component, would preserve user choice and ease future competition concerns.
Read: Only Google can run Chrome, company says in antitrust trial
Analysts have said Google would be unlikely to sell Chrome and would likely engage in a long legal fight to prevent that outcome, given it is crucial to the company’s AI push as it rolls out features including AI-generated search summaries, known as Overviews, to help defend its search market share.
A federal judge, Amit Mehta, is expected to issue a ruling on remedies in the Google search antitrust case sometime this month.
“Judge Mehta is a pretty orthodox guy. It’s very possible that he would hold off on requiring a sale until the appeals process is worked out and that could be a very lengthy period of time,” said Herbert Hovenkamp, professor at University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School.
“It would go to the DC circuit, which is sceptical of forced divestitures, and it’s possible it would even go to the supreme court after that. So that process could run out for a couple of years.”
Perplexity’s bid is also below the at-least-$50-billion value that rival search engine DuckDuckGo’s CEO, Gabriel Weinberg, suggested Chrome may command if Google was forced to sell it. — Akash Sriram and Krystal Hu, (c) 2025 Reuters
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