Direct Peering overview

Direct Peering enables you to establish a direct peering connection between your business network and Google's edge network and exchange high-throughput cloud traffic.

This capability is available at any of more than 100 locations in 33 countries around the world. For more information about Google's edge locations, see Google's peering site.

When established, Direct Peering provides a direct path from your on-premises network to Google services, including Google Cloud products that can be exposed through one or more public IP addresses. Traffic from Google's network to your on-premises network also takes that direct path, including traffic from VPC networks in your projects.

Direct Peering exists outside of Google Cloud. Unless you need to access Google Workspace applications, the recommended methods of access to Google Cloud are Dedicated Interconnect or Partner Interconnect.

For a description of the differences between Direct Peering and Cloud Interconnect, see the comparison table.

Considerations

If used with Google Cloud, Direct Peering doesn't produce any custom routes in a VPC network. Traffic sent from resources in a VPC network leaves by way of a route whose next hop is either a default internet gateway (a default route, for example) or a Cloud VPN tunnel. If the destination for the traffic matches your on-premises IP ranges, it could be eligible for discounted egress rates, as described in Getting started.

To send traffic through Direct Peering by using a route whose next hop is a Cloud VPN tunnel, the IP address of your on-premises network's VPN gateway must be in your configured destination range.

Service level

Google does not offer a service level agreement (SLA) with Direct Peering. For customers who are interested in an SLA, we recommend using Cloud Interconnect.

Who can peer with Google?

Any Google Cloud customers that meet Google's technical peering requirements can be considered for Direct Peering. Google can peer at locations listed in our PeeringDB entry.

We recommend that customers privately peer with Google. Private peering provides dedicated physical ports between Google and customers, and can provide better performance and reliability than public peering.

When privately peering, Google requires physical redundancy with at least two separate connections to Google in a single metropolitan area. Each physical connection must have its own IP addressing.

For more information about requirements, and to review Google's peering best practices for Google Cloud customers, visit Google peering.

Getting started

To request that a new peering connection be established, register your interest with our peering team. If you meet the posted technical requirements, a Google representative will contact you with further details to guide you through the application process.