Best HIPAA-Compliant Alternative to Google Meet for Medical Practices
TLDR
Google Meet CAN be HIPAA compliant — but only through a properly configured Google Workspace account with a signed BAA, not through free or personal Gmail accounts. Practices using free Google Meet for telehealth or patient-adjacent video calls have no HIPAA coverage. PHIGuard doesn't replace Google Meet; it handles the administrative task management and follow-up tracking that happens around patient visits, within a HIPAA-compliant system.
Quick Verdict
Google Meet CAN be HIPAA compliant — but only through a properly configured Google Workspace account with a signed BAA, not through free or personal Gmail accounts. Practices using free Google Meet for telehealth or patient-adjacent video calls have no HIPAA coverage. PHIGuard doesn't replace Google Meet; it handles the administrative task management and follow-up tracking that happens around patient visits, within a HIPAA-compliant system.
| Feature | Google Meet | PHIGuard |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost (small practice) | Free (no BAA); Workspace Business Standard $12/user/mo for BAA | $20–$99/mo |
| Setup fee | Varies | $0 |
| HIPAA-native | No (enterprise add-on) | Yes — built in |
| BAA included | Enterprise tier only | Every tier |
| Pricing model | Per-user | Per-clinic flat rate |
PHIGuard offers the same core features at $20–$99/mo with zero setup fees — vs. Google Meet at Free (no BAA); Workspace Business Standard $12/user/mo for BAA.
The Free Google Meet HIPAA Problem
Most small clinics don’t use Google Workspace — they use Gmail and Google Meet through personal or free accounts.
Those accounts have no HIPAA coverage. Google’s terms of service for free consumer products explicitly disclaim obligations around healthcare compliance. There is no BAA available, no audit logging, no access controls that satisfy HIPAA technical safeguard requirements. A telehealth call through a personal Gmail account is not a gray area — it is a violation.
The practice using free Google Meet because “it’s encrypted” is relying on a security feature that is not the same as HIPAA compliance. Encryption protects data in transit; a BAA creates the legal framework for handling PHI. Both are required.
When Google Meet Can Be HIPAA Compliant
Google offers a HIPAA BAA for Google Workspace accounts. This is the correct path for practices that want to use Google Meet for telehealth.
The administrator must sign the BAA at admin.google.com. It must be signed before any PHI is involved in video calls. Workspace Business Standard ($12/user/month) is the typical starting point for healthcare teams. Recordings stored in Google Drive need separate review — the BAA covers core Workspace services, but practices should confirm which services are included and apply appropriate retention policies.
Purpose-built telehealth platforms like Doxy.me come with explicit BAAs and eliminate the configuration risk entirely. For practices that prioritize simplicity and zero setup error margin, that’s a cleaner path.
What Google Meet Doesn’t Handle
Video calls are one piece of the compliance picture. The coordination work that surrounds patient visits — follow-up tasks, referral tracking, prior authorization status, billing exceptions, credentialing deadlines — typically happens in email threads, sticky notes, or group chats outside any compliant system.
That coordination gap is what creates audit exposure. When a patient’s follow-up falls through, or a referral goes untracked, or staff training lapses — the question in an OCR review is whether there was a system in place to catch it.
Where PHIGuard Fits
PHIGuard is not a telehealth tool. It doesn’t replace Google Meet for video visits.
PHIGuard handles the task management and compliance documentation layer: assigning follow-up tasks after visits, tracking referral status, managing compliance training completions, documenting risk assessments. That work happens inside a HIPAA-compliant system with a BAA at every tier, an audit trail, and per-clinic flat-rate pricing.
Practices can use Google Meet (via Workspace) for the video visit and PHIGuard for the administrative work that comes before and after. The two tools address different parts of the compliance picture.
Flat pricing: $20/month for Practice (up to 10 staff), $49/month for Clinic (up to 25 staff), $99/month for Health System (unlimited staff).
Who Should Upgrade Google Workspace Instead
If your practice is already on Google Workspace and the administrator has signed the BAA, Google Meet is a reasonable tool for telehealth. Upgrade the plan if you’re on a tier where service coverage is unclear, and confirm the BAA was actually signed — many practices assume it’s automatic when it isn’t.
The gap PHIGuard addresses isn’t in the video call itself. It’s in everything that happens around it.
PROS & CONS
Google Meet
Pros
- Familiar interface most staff already know, no training curve
- Integrates with Google Calendar and Workspace for easy scheduling
- HIPAA-eligible when used through a properly configured Workspace account with a signed BAA
Cons
- Personal Gmail and free accounts have no BAA — zero HIPAA coverage for PHI
- BAA requires administrator action; misconfiguration leaves the practice exposed
- Not purpose-built for healthcare — no clinical workflows, no audit trail for visit coordination
- Recordings stored in Google Drive require separate compliance review and retention controls
Source: Google Workspace pricing
Q&A
Can a small clinic use Google Meet for telehealth under HIPAA?
Yes, if the clinic is on Google Workspace with the BAA signed by an account administrator. Personal Gmail accounts cannot be used. The BAA must be signed at admin.google.com before any PHI-adjacent video visits occur. Practices should also review which Workspace services the BAA covers, as not every Google service is automatically included.
Q&A
What is the HIPAA risk of using free Google Meet?
Free Google Meet accounts — including those accessed through a personal Gmail — have no BAA. Using free Google Meet for telehealth appointments or any video call that involves PHI is a HIPAA violation. Google's terms of service for free accounts explicitly disclaim healthcare compliance obligations.
Q&A
What does PHIGuard add for practices already on Google Workspace?
PHIGuard handles the administrative coordination that happens around patient visits: post-visit follow-up tasks, referral tracking, billing exception management, training completions, and compliance documentation. These coordination workflows often happen in email threads or spreadsheets outside any HIPAA-compliant system. PHIGuard consolidates them into one auditable place at a flat per-clinic rate.
Is Google Meet HIPAA compliant?
Does Google offer a HIPAA BAA?
What Google Workspace plan do I need for HIPAA compliance?
Does PHIGuard include a BAA?
Ready to switch?
- BAA included at every tier
- Per-clinic flat rate
- Starting at $20/month
Related Comparisons
Is Google Meet HIPAA Compliant? What Medical Practices Need to Know
Google Meet can be HIPAA compliant — but only through a paid Google Workspace account with a signed BAA. Free personal accounts have no HIPAA coverage whatsoever.
Is Google Workspace HIPAA Compliant? What Medical Practices Need to Know
Google Workspace is HIPAA compliant on Business Starter ($6/user/mo) and above — Google will sign a BAA covering Gmail, Drive, and Meet. But configuration is required, and not every Google service is covered.
What Is a Business Associate Agreement (BAA)? HIPAA Explained
A Business Associate Agreement (BAA) is a HIPAA-required contract between your medical practice and any vendor handling patient data. Without one, you're exposed.
5 HIPAA Compliant Telehealth Platforms for Small Medical Practices (2026)
Comparing the best HIPAA compliant telehealth platforms for small clinics. Every option includes a signed BAA, encryption, and access controls required under the Security Rule.