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Google is bringing back a familiar name: Data Studio

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In an AI-driven economy, companies have more data than ever but still struggle to turn it into useful daily decisions. Google is betting that a revamped Data Studio can become the place where users quickly explore, organize and act on data across its ecosystem.

Why the switch back. Google says the new Data Studio will serve as a central hub for a range of assets, from traditional reports and dashboards to data apps built in Colab and BigQuery conversational agents. The idea is to give users one place to work with the tools and information that shape their business each day.

Flashback. Three years ago, Google folded Data Studio into its broader analytics push by rebranding it as Looker Studio. Now, it is separating the products again as customer needs evolve.

Two versions. Google is launching two versions of the product.

  • Data Studio will remain free for individuals and small teams that need quick analysis and visualization.
  • Data Studio Pro, meanwhile, is aimed at larger organizations that need stronger security, compliance, management controls and AI capabilities, with licenses sold through the Google Cloud and Workspace admin consoles.

Why we care. The (kind of) new Data Studio could make it much easier to pull together campaign, audience and performance data from across Google’s ecosystem in one place. That means faster reporting, easier ad hoc analysis and quicker answers without relying as heavily on analysts or engineering teams. For brands already using Google Ads, BigQuery or Sheets, it could streamline how teams track performance and make day-to-day budget and creative decisions.

Where Looker fits in. Under the new structure, Looker will remain Google Cloud’s enterprise business intelligence platform, focused on governed data, semantic modeling and large-scale analytics. Data Studio, by contrast, is being positioned as the faster, more flexible option for personal exploration, ad hoc reporting and lightweight dashboards across services like BigQuery, Google Sheets and Ads.

What’s next. For existing users, Google says the transition should be seamless. Current reports, data sources and assets will carry over automatically, with no action required.

Google plans to share more about the relaunch and its broader analytics strategy at Google Cloud Next ’26 later this month.

Dig deeper. Data Studio returns as new home for Data Cloud assets

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