Google gifted Pixel 9 users with a free year-long subscription to its newly enhanced AI One Pro last month. With the launch of the Fold 7, Samsung made a similar free offer that flew under the radar.
Galaxy S25, S25 Plus, Galaxy S25 Ultra, Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Z Flip 7 users qualify for six months of Google AI One Pro, which typically costs $19.99 per month. AI One Pro is essentially Google’s rebranded AI Premium subscription tier, which includes access to Gemini 2.5 Pro, filmmaking tool Flow, Gemini in Workspace apps and 2TB of storage, alongside other AI tools.
To redeem the offer, download and sign into the Google One app. You should then be presented with the offer. As I was already a subscriber, Google gave me a six-month payment break until February 2026 and a small refund on what I paid for that month. Just don’t forget to put a note in your calendar to cancel it if you don’t want to pay for the service after the offer ends.
In Samsung’s efforts to position the Fold 7 and Flip 7 as the multi-tasking phones, Galaxy foldable phone users are also treated to a selection of other free subscriptions.
- Two months free of Adobe Lightroom
- 50% off LumaFusion video editing
- 30% off Arcsite
- 30% off Noteshelf
This isn’t the company’s first rodeo. Last month it also gifted a 12 month subscription to Perplexity AI Pro to millions of Galaxy phone and tablet users. Read about how to redeem that offer here.
Don’t Pay For Samsung Or Google’s AI, It’s Free Everywhere
Samsung and Google have made repeated free AI offers to users of their respective phones. Google bundled Gemini Advanced with the Pixel 9 series when it launched last year, and then extended that offer after rebranding to Google AI One Pro (alongside adding new video generation features).
Samsung, too, recently gave away a free year’s subscription to Perplexity AI Pro (worth $200), another generative AI chatbot, to Galaxy phone and tablet users in the U.S.
The Korean company has also kept its Galaxy AI suite of tools free for the time being. Samsung has repeatedly said that the toolset is free until “the end of 2025,” and refused to elaborate further. I quizzed the company about this at the recent Galaxy Z Fold 7 press briefing, but got no firm answer on pricing plans. I suspect Samsung is waiting to see how popular Galaxy AI is, and to see if people actually use it regularly, before charging.
I imagine Apple’s troubles with launching its own personalised Siri, which was promised and then delayed to some criticism, is part of Samsung’s (and Google’s) thinking. If their chief smartphone rival is getting some flak for failing to deliver promised AI features, then making your own product free makes it more enticing. Google’s new Pixel 10 ad suggests that is very much the company’s strategy.