Amazon to invest $13B in India's AI and cloud infrastructure by 2030
This announcement was made following a meeting between Amazon CEO Andy Jassy and Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi on Thursday.
Amazon announced an additional investment of $13 billion in India from 2026 to 2030, taking its cumulative commitment in the country to $48 billion. The company had previously pledged $35 billion in investments as of December 2025.
This announcement was made following a meeting between Amazon CEO Andy Jassy and Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi on Thursday.
In a blog post, Amazon said the $13 billion will be invested to expand the AI and cloud infrastructure in the country by 2030. The latest commitment brings the company's total investment in this segment to more than $21 billion.
According to Amazon, the investment will be used to expand AWS data centre capacity in Mumbai and Hyderabad, giving startups, enterprises, and government organisations access to custom AI chips, managed AI services, secure and reliable cloud technologies and developer tools.
Amazon said its AWS Regions in Mumbai and Hyderabad will enable customers to securely store data within India while providing access to advanced AI and cloud technologies.
The company added that hundreds of thousands of Indian enterprises, startups and government agencies already use AWS to build, train and deploy AI workloads at scale. These include the National Health Authority, Government e-Marketplace, Apollo Tyres, Delhivery, Physics Wallah, Axis Bank and HDFC Bank, among others.
With the latest commitment, Amazon's cumulative investments in India between 2010 and 2030 are expected to exceed $88 billion.
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said, “We came to India over a decade ago and have since been serving customers, sellers, developers, start-ups and enterprises through our different businesses. The response has been tremendous, with strong growth especially across our ecommerce, AI, and cloud businesses.”
Amazon said it will continue investing in the operations network powering its ecommerce and quick commerce business. The company plans to launch more than 20 new fulfillment centres and over 100 new last-mile delivery stations this year.
“As we grow Amazon in India, our business priorities continue to align with India’s priorities of democratizing access to AI, digitising small businesses, creating jobs, and enabling exports,” Jassy said.
Amazon operates several businesses including ecommerce, AI and cloud, and entertainment among others. The company said since its launch in India, it has digitized 12 million small businesses, enabled over $20 billion in cumulative ecommerce exports, and supported 2.8 million jobs. It has also trained over 10 million Indians on cloud skills.
Amazon has pledged to support 3.8 million jobs and $80 billion in cumulative exports, and enable AI benefits for 15 million small businesses and AI education for 4 million government school students.
Edited by Megha Reddy

