Waystar, a leading provider of revenue cycle management (RCM) software, has significantly expanded its strategic collaboration with Google Cloud to accelerate the development and deployment of AI-driven, autonomous workflows across the entire revenue cycle. The enhanced partnership focuses on leveraging Google Cloud’s Vertex AI, Gemini models, and healthcare-specific AI tools to automate complex, multi-step RCM processes reducing denials, accelerating reimbursements, minimising manual intervention, and lowering cost-to-collect for hospitals, physician groups, and payers.
Glimpse:
Announced on January 27, 2026, the expanded collaboration builds on Waystar’s existing Google Cloud foundation by integrating generative AI for predictive denial management, automated appeals, intelligent document processing, and real-time payer-provider collaboration. Early joint capabilities are already live for select Waystar clients, delivering 25–40% reductions in manual review time, 15–30% lower initial denial rates, and faster payment cycles. The partnership will drive broader autonomous RCM innovation throughout 2026–2027.
Waystar has announced a major expansion of its long-standing partnership with Google Cloud, doubling down on AI to create more autonomous, intelligent revenue cycle management workflows. The enhanced collaboration, revealed on January 27, 2026, will harness Google Cloud’s Vertex AI platform, Gemini large language models, and specialised healthcare AI capabilities to automate end-to-end RCM processes that have traditionally required significant human effort.
The expanded scope includes:
- Predictive denial intelligence — AI models that analyse historical claims data, payer rules, and clinical documentation to predict denial likelihood before submission and recommend preventive corrections
- Generative AI-powered appeals — Automated drafting of compliant, evidence-based appeal letters tailored to specific denial codes and payer policies
- Intelligent document processing — Extraction and interpretation of unstructured data from scanned EOBs, medical records, and correspondence using multimodal AI
- Autonomous follow-up orchestration — AI agents that monitor claim status, initiate payer follow-ups, escalate unresolved issues, and update provider systems in real time
- Real-time payer-provider collaboration — Secure, AI-facilitated communication channels to resolve discrepancies and accelerate adjudication
These capabilities are being built on Waystar’s existing cloud native platform, which already runs on Google Cloud infrastructure. The partnership ensures HIPAA compliance, data sovereignty, robust security controls, and explainable AI outputs to maintain trust and auditability in high-stakes financial workflows.
Early joint deployments with select Waystar clients have demonstrated substantial gains: 25–40% reduction in manual review time for complex claims, 15–30% decrease in initial denial rates, faster reimbursement cycles, and improved first-pass resolution. The AI tools have also reduced provider abrasion by minimising unnecessary back-and-forth with payers and enabling more proactive resolution of issues.
Waystar leadership commented: “Revenue cycle management is ripe for autonomous AI. By deepening our partnership with Google Cloud, we’re building intelligent workflows that handle routine complexity at scale freeing RCM teams to focus on strategic priorities and high-value exceptions while accelerating cash flow for our clients.”
Google Cloud Healthcare & Life Sciences Executive added: “Healthcare administrative processes remain a major source of inefficiency and cost. Combining Waystar’s RCM domain expertise with Google Cloud’s AI scale and security enables us to deliver autonomous solutions that improve financial outcomes and reduce friction across the entire revenue cycle.”
The expanded collaboration is part of Waystar’s broader vision to create a fully autonomous revenue cycle platform over the coming years. Additional capabilities including AI-driven contract management, underpayment recovery, and patient financial engagement are already in development and expected to roll out progressively throughout 2026 and 2027.
“The future of RCM isn’t about faster humans doing the same work it’s about intelligent systems handling routine tasks autonomously so people can focus on exceptions, strategy, and patient outcomes.”
By
HB Team
