The U.S. hyperscale data center market, the world's largest, is projected to attract investments of USD 697.84 billion b
The U.S. hyperscale data center market remains the largest globally, with investment activity increasingly centered on GPU infrastructure, advanced cooling technologies, large-scale power capacity, and renewable energy procurement. Industry operators continue to expand hyperscale campuses and develop new facilities to accommodate growing computing requirements across cloud, AI, and high-performance computing environments. The market is expected to attract investments of USD 697.84 billion by 2031, growing at a compound annual growth rate of 14.66% during the forecast period.
Hyperscale investments are concentrating in the Midwest and Southeast regions of the U.S. Virginia, Texas, and Illinois are leading states for data center capacity additions, with Virginia maintaining the largest market position reflecting its concentration of colocation deployments and major investments from AWS and Microsoft. Texas, Illinois, and Arizona are also attracting significant capacity additions as operators seek locations with access to scalable power infrastructure. Power availability is increasingly shaping development decisions across the industry.
Major cloud providers have secured more than 40 gigawatts of wind and solar capacity through Power Purchase Agreements. AWS alone is expected to add over 1 gigawatt of self-built capacity between 2025 and 2030, while Microsoft maintains an active development pipeline across Virginia. Data center power capacity additions in the U.S. come from both colocation providers and hyperscale self-built facilities, with operators prioritizing locations that can support their expanding computing and renewable energy requirements.