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Microsoft’s biggest India data center on track to go live in mid-2026, executive says

By Thomson Reuters May 19, 2026 | 7:51 AM

By Aditya Soni and Abhirami G

May 19 (Reuters) – Microsoft’s biggest data center in India is on track to open by mid-2026, its country head said on Tuesday, as the ​tech giant spends heavily to bolster its position in ‌one of the world’s largest markets for artificial intelligence services.

There’s “massive demand” for Azure cloud services and the $30-a-month Copilot 365 AI assistant in the country, Puneet Chandok, president, Microsoft India and South Asia, told Reuters.

Like rivals Alphabet and ‌Amazon, ​Microsoft sees India as a potentially profitable ⁠market for AI thanks ⁠to its more than 1 billion internet users and deep tech talent.

Tapping that market is crucial as it looks to prove to investors that its massive bet on AI will pay ​off.

The company announced late last year that it would invest $17.5 billion in India, its biggest outlay in Asia, on top ⁠of the $3 billion pledged at the ⁠start of 2025.

That includes a new data center ​in the southern tech hub of Hyderabad, where Microsoft already has ​a significant presence.

“We are the ones who are bringing this ‌to life quickly, the fastest out of the gates,” Chandok said of the company’s data center build-out, adding that the Hyderabad facility would be its biggest in India without disclosing exact capacity.

The ⁠new capacity will serve a growing customer base for AI services in India. Microsoft counts IT giants Infosys, Cognizant and Tata Consultancy Services ⁠among Copilot customers, ‌with about 50,000 licenses each.

Chandok also said the ⁠India operations are contributing to AI features Microsoft ​is ‌rolling out globally. The company employs more than ​22,000 people ⁠in the country across cities.

Hiring staff to develop the features is getting tougher as demand exceeds supply, causing a “war for talent,” Chandok said.

“The challenges in India are the same as everywhere else in the world.”

(Reporting by Aditya Soni and Abhirami G in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Anil D’Silva)