OpenAI Confirms $30B Oracle Cloud Deal for AI Infrastructure

OpenAI has confirmed its role in a $30 billion-per-year cloud infrastructure deal with Oracle, marking one of the largest cloud contracts in tech history. Part of the ambitious Stargate project, the deal aims to support OpenAI’s growing demand for compute resources, with 4.5GW of capacity dedicated to training and deploying advanced AI models. The partnership positions Oracle as a major player in the AI cloud arms race while signaling OpenAI’s shift toward vertically integrated infrastructure solutions.
OpenAI Confirms $30B Oracle Cloud Deal for AI Infrastructure

In one of the largest infrastructure contracts in tech history, OpenAI has officially been named as the customer behind Oracle’s previously undisclosed $30 billion-per-year data center deal. While the dollar amount was not confirmed by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, the company has acknowledged its role in the landmark agreement, which was first hinted at in Oracle’s June 30 SEC filing.


The contract represents a major leap in AI infrastructure scale, underscoring OpenAI’s long-term plans to support the exponential growth of AI workloads. It also reflects Oracle’s growing presence in the hyperscale cloud market, positioning it to compete with rivals like AWS, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure.

OpenAI Secures $30B Annually in Oracle Cloud Services

The Wall Street Journal first reported that OpenAI was behind Oracle’s record-breaking cloud agreement. Altman later confirmed the partnership—though not the price tag—in a blog post and on social media.

The $30 billion annual figure is staggering. For context, Oracle generated a total of $24.5 billion in cloud services revenue across all customers in its fiscal year 2025. This single OpenAI contract exceeds that, pushing Oracle’s infrastructure roadmap into unprecedented territory.

According to filings, the deal will provide OpenAI with 4.5 gigawatts of capacity—roughly equivalent to the output of two Hoover Dams. That kind of power is enough to serve about four million U.S. homes.

Stargate Project: The $500B AI Data Center Megascale Plan

This contract is part of “Stargate,” a previously announced $500 billion initiative between OpenAI, Oracle, and SoftBank to build massive data centers optimized for generative AI workloads. The first deployment, Stargate I, is currently underway in Abilene, Texas.

Interestingly, SoftBank is not directly involved in the $30 billion portion of the deal, which is exclusive to Oracle and OpenAI.

The scale of this project reflects OpenAI’s need to support large-scale inference and model training. From multimodal large language models (LLMs) to real-time AI-powered assistants and developer tools, OpenAI’s demands for compute capacity are soaring.

Oracle’s Cloud Investment Strategy to Support AI Demand

Oracle has been investing heavily to support this and other hyperscale clients. In its most recent fiscal report, the company disclosed $21.2 billion in capital expenditures. Another $25 billion is expected this year—primarily for data center construction and hardware procurement.

Notably, those figures do not include land acquisition costs, which CEO Safra Catz said are handled separately. While this spending benefits multiple customers, OpenAI is now expected to be Oracle’s largest by far.

Larry Ellison, Oracle’s founder and CTO, has seen a significant rise in personal wealth as a result. Following the deal’s disclosure, Oracle stock surged, briefly making Ellison the world’s second-richest person, per Bloomberg.

OpenAI’s Cloud Spend Surpasses Its Current Revenue

One of the most surprising aspects of the deal is its size relative to OpenAI’s current revenue. The company recently hit $10 billion in annual recurring revenue (ARR), up from $5.5 billion just a year earlier.

This means the Oracle agreement, on its own, is nearly three times the size of OpenAI’s current ARR. It doesn’t include other cloud expenses or operational costs, including its existing commitments with Microsoft Azure, where OpenAI has also deployed significant infrastructure.

In short, OpenAI is betting its future—and massive capital—on the need for proprietary compute capacity to support its roadmap for AI model scaling and deployment.

What the OpenAI-Oracle Deal Means for AI Infrastructure

This move is a clear indication that existing hyperscale providers may not be able to meet the unique demands of future AI systems. OpenAI appears to be hedging against potential limitations in availability or pricing by securing dedicated infrastructure through Oracle.

The Stargate project also suggests a strategic pivot: rather than relying solely on traditional cloud capacity, OpenAI is seeking more control over physical infrastructure, likely to improve performance, energy efficiency, and data governance.

Why Texas Is Key to OpenAI’s AI Infrastructure Expansion

Stargate I’s location in Abilene, Texas isn’t arbitrary. Texas offers relatively low-cost energy, regulatory flexibility, and wide-open space for hyperscale development. With 4.5 GW of power requirements, siting such facilities near renewable or stable power grids is critical.

Additionally, Oracle and OpenAI may benefit from proximity to major network hubs and fiber routes, optimizing performance for data transfer and model distribution.

Oracle’s Competitive Edge in the AI Cloud Race

This deal is a major win for Oracle, long considered an underdog in the cloud race. While AWS, Google, and Microsoft have dominated the market, Oracle’s focus on high-performance enterprise workloads and custom configurations has opened doors to partnerships like this.

The company is also capitalizing on the global demand for AI infrastructure that can support advanced LLMs, robotics, simulation environments, and autonomous agents.

As AI models grow in complexity, compute efficiency and proximity to clean energy sources will become as important as software and model optimization.

What This $30B Deal Means for OpenAI and Oracle’s Future

Several key questions remain:

  • Will OpenAI continue scaling with multiple cloud providers, or eventually migrate fully to its own infrastructure?

  • How will this project affect its existing partnerships, particularly with Microsoft?

  • What kinds of AI applications will benefit most from Stargate’s architecture?

  • How does this level of compute tie into OpenAI’s broader ambitions around AGI (Artificial General Intelligence)?

Despite the unanswered questions, one thing is clear: the scale of AI infrastructure is entering a new era—one defined by megadeals, multi-gigawatt data centers, and vertically integrated stacks.

Oracle, once seen as lagging behind the cloud leaders, is now at the center of one of AI’s biggest infrastructure plays to date.

And OpenAI, with a growing product ecosystem and expanding revenue base, is making bold moves to secure the resources needed to stay ahead in the global AI race.


Recent Content

The NTIA has approved all 56 U.S. states and territories to move into the “Benefit of the Bargain” round under the $42.45B BEAD Program. This competitive subgrantee selection phase streamlines broadband deployment nationwide by allowing fiber, fixed wireless, and satellite providers equal footing under new, tech-neutral NTIA rules. Final proposals are due by September 4, 2025, as the U.S. pushes toward universal internet access.
smartR AI™ is celebrating a major win, taking home the coveted “Best AI Implementation in Information Technology” award at the highly competitive 2025 Business Awards UK. This prestigious recognition underscores the groundbreaking success and transformative impact of smartR AI’s flagship product, SCOTi®.
The global market for agentic AI is anticipated to grow from an estimated USD 13.81 billion in 2025 to USD 140.80 billion by 2032 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 39.3% during the forecast period.
Qualcomm teams up with Lenskart to introduce AI-driven smart glasses to India, leveraging Snapdragon XR platforms for immersive AR, VR, and MR experiences. With over 100 devices already powered by Snapdragon XR and a strong push for localized innovation, Qualcomm is betting big on spatial computing as the next phase of everyday tech.
Many fiber rollouts stumble before trenching begins, not in the field, but in flawed planning rooms. This article uncovers why approved designs collapse under real-world conditions, how disconnected inventories and outdated GIS layers set projects up for failure, and why simulation, permitting, and collaboration must start early. Learn how telecom teams can replace static spreadsheets with live intelligence—and why VC4’s Service2Create rewrites the rules of fiber network planning.
The Istanbul Expo Center (IFM) has become Türkiye’s first venue to deploy an indoor 5G Private Network, turning its 96,000 m² exhibition space into a next-gen smart venue for digital trade fairs. The Opticoms and ADSYS project integrates IoT, edge computing, and network slicing to support real-time testing, secure enterprise connectivity, and immersive AR/VR showcases.
Whitepaper
As VoLTE becomes the standard for voice communication, its rapid deployment exposes telecom networks to new security risks, especially in roaming scenarios. SecurityGen’s research uncovers key vulnerabilities like unauthorized access to IMS, SIP protocol threats, and lack of encryption. Learn how to strengthen VoLTE security with proactive measures such as...
Whitepaper
Dive into the comprehensive analysis of GTPu within 5G networks in our whitepaper, offering insights into its operational mechanics, strategic importance, and adaptation to the evolving landscape of cellular technologies....

It seems we can't find what you're looking for.

Download Magazine

With Subscription

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Scroll to Top

Private Network Awards

Recognizing excellence in 5G, LTE, CBRS, and connected industries. Nominate your project and gain industry-wide recognition.
Early Bird Deadline: Sept 5, 2025 | Final Deadline: Sept 30, 2025