
Amazon has pledged US$13 billion in additional investment to expand its AI and cloud infrastructure in India through 2030, bringing its total committed investment in the country to US$48 billion across three major commitments since 2023.
The announcement came after Amazon CEO Andy Jassy met India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi. The funds will expand AWS data centre capacity in Mumbai and Hyderabad.
The new commitment adds to US$15 billion announced in 2023 and a further commitment in December 2025 that brought the cumulative figure to approximately US$48 billion. Amazon did not detail how the total would be deployed across businesses; long-term commitments of this type typically include both capital and operating expenditures.
Amazon’s investment is part of a broader wave of AI infrastructure spending in India. Microsoft committed US$17.5 billion by 2029 in December 2025. Google announced US$15 billion for an AI hub and data centre infrastructure in October 2025. Australian data centre operator AirTrunk committed US$30 billion for 5 gigawatts of AI data centers, and Canadian pension fund CPP Investments is funding the Indian data centre boom. Indian conglomerates Reliance Industries and Adani Group have announced US$110 billion and US$100 billion in AI investment plans respectively.
“Amazon’s latest India investment comes as global tech companies race to expand AI infrastructure in the country,” TechCrunch reported. The Indian government has encouraged the influx by offering tax exemptions for foreign cloud providers on services sold overseas if workloads are run from Indian data centers.
Alongside its cloud expansion, Amazon is also growing its domestic retail and logistics network in India, adding more than 20 new fulfillment centers and 100 last-mile delivery stations planned for 2026, and expanding its quick-commerce service Amazon Now to over 300 cities.
Sources: Amazon ups India bet with fresh $13B AI infrastructure investment (TechCrunch, June 25, 2026)

