Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Microsoft Forecasts Show Data Center Crunch Persisting Into 2026

(Bloomberg) — Microsoft Corp.’s data-center crunch will continue for longer than the company has previously outlined, underscoring the software giant’s struggles to keep up with cloud demand.

Many of Microsoft’s US data center regions are experiencing shortages of physical space or servers, according to people familiar with the company’s internal forecasts. New subscriptions for Azure cloud services are restricted in some crucial server-farm hubs, including Northern Virginia and Texas, through the first half of next year, said the people who requested anonymity to discuss internal forecasts.

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That’s a longer time frame than the company has previously outlined. In July, Chief Financial Officer Amy Hood said current constraints would continue through the end of 2025. The lack of capacity affects machines running graphics processing units typically used for artificial intelligence as well as data centers dominated by central processing units that have long been the workhorse chips for traditional cloud services, the people said.

Azure is Microsoft’s most important growth engine — the cloud unit generated more than $75 billion during the 2025 fiscal year. Its expansion has outpaced its biggest rivals, Amazon.com Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google.

A lack of servers to rent out to customers has been a recurring concern for cloud providers in recent years. During the last six quarterly earnings calls, Microsoft has said it was unable to meet all of its customers’ cloud demand. Amazon and Google have described similar constraints.

A Microsoft spokesperson said that a majority of Azure services and regions in the US “have available capacity so that existing customers with deployed workloads can continue to grow.” In some cases of unplanned demand spikes, the company will introduce “capacity preservation methods” to balance customer demand across its data center fleet, the spokesperson said.

Azure customers select data-center regions based on physical proximity and what software is available. When a preferred facility lacks space, Microsoft salespeople point customers toward others with capacity, according to internal guidance. But these workarounds can increase complexity and the amount of time it takes data to travel between a server farm and the customer, said people familiar with the work.

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