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Nvidia to sell 1 million chips to Amazon by end of 2027 in cloud deal

By Thomson Reuters Mar 19, 2026 | 4:33 PM

By Stephen Nellis

SAN FRANCISCO, March 19 (Reuters) – Nvidia will sell 1 million of its graphics processing unit chips, along with a host of the AI giant’s other offerings, to ​Amazon.com’s cloud computing unit by 2027, a Nvidia executive told ‌Reuters on Thursday.

Nvidia and Amazon Web Services said this week that AWS had reached a deal to buy its 1 million GPUs but had not disclosed the precise timing of the deal. Ian Buck, vice president of hyperscale and ‌high-performance ​computing at Nvidia, told Reuters on Thursday ⁠that the sales would start ⁠this year and extend through 2027.

That is the same time frame through which Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said the company sees an overall sales opportunity of $1 trillion for its Rubin and Blackwell ​families of chips.

Nvidia and Amazon did not disclose the financial terms of their deal. But Buck told Reuters the transaction contains a broad mix ⁠of Nvidia chips beyond the 1 ⁠million GPUs, including Nvidia’s Spectrum networking chips and the ​Groq chips that Nvidia released this week after its $17 billion licensing ​deal with an AI chip startup late last year.

In particular, ‌AWS plans to use a combination of Nvidia’s Groq chips, along with six others from Nvidia, for more efficient inference, the name for the process by which AI systems generate answers and carry out ⁠tasks on behalf of users.

“Inference is hard. It’s wickedly hard,” Buck told Reuters. “To be the best at inference, it is not a one chip ⁠pony. We actually use ‌all seven chips.”

The deal also includes putting Nvidia’s ⁠Connect X and Spectrum X networking gear in ​AWS ‌data centers. That move is significant because AWS ​data centers ⁠use custom networking equipment that AWS has spent years perfecting.

“They’re still going to do that, of course,” Buck said. “But we are collaborating now on deploying Connect X and Spectrum X for those important workloads and biggest customers across AI with AWS.”

(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing ​by David Gregorio)