NEEDHAM, Mass., January 17, 2025 – According to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly Enterprise Infrastructure Tracker: Buyer and Cloud Deployment, spending on compute and storage infrastructure products for cloud deployments, including dedicated and shared IT environments, increased 115.3% year-over-year in the third quarter of 2024 (3Q24) to $57.3 billion. Spending on cloud infrastructure continues to outgrow the non-cloud segment with the latter growing by 28.6% in 3Q24 to $19.6 billion. The cloud infrastructure segment experienced a lower growth in unit demand of 15.6%, due to a continued increase in ASPs mostly related to the exponential increase of GPU server shipments.
“Cloud infrastructure spending growth continues being driven by accelerated servers related investments that not only aim to cover AI initiatives but also support large HPC projects that were unveiling recently,” said Juan Pablo Seminara, Director for IDC’s Worldwide Enterprise Infrastructure Trackers. “After a year where the demand was focus on serve infrastructure build-up for AI model development and training, we will start to see more investments oriented to AI model inferencing that will shift demand towards less dense GPU based platforms, that of course will continue be demanded throughout 2025 and beyond but with a less aggressive pace than last year.”
Spending on shared cloud infrastructure reached $47.9 billion in the quarter, increasing 136.5% compared to a year ago. The shared cloud infrastructure category continues capturing the largest share of spending compared to dedicated deployments and non-cloud spending, in 3Q24 shared cloud accounted for 62.4% of the total infrastructure spending. The dedicated cloud infrastructure segment presented lower growth of 47.6% year-over-year in 3Q24 to $9.3 billion.
For 2024, IDC is forecasting cloud infrastructure spending to grow 74.3% compared to 2023 to $192.0 billion. Non-cloud infrastructure is expected to grow 17.9% to $71.4 billion. Shared cloud infrastructure is expected to grow 88.9% year over year to $157.8 billion for the full year, spending on dedicated cloud infrastructure is also expected to have a double-digit growth in 2024 with 28.6% to $34.2 billion for the full year. The subdued growth forecast for non-cloud infrastructure at 17.9% in 2024 reflects that even though most of the growth will come from cloud spending, general non-cloud dedicated systems are consolidating the recovery this year.
IDC’s service provider category includes cloud service providers, digital service providers, communications service providers, hyperscaler, and managed service providers. In 3Q24, service providers as a group spent $54.2 billion on compute and storage infrastructure, up 113.8% from the prior year. This spending accounted for 70.6% of the total market. Non-service providers (e.g., enterprises, government, etc.) also increased their spending to $22.6 billion growing 37.5% year-over-year. IDC expects compute and storage spending by service providers to reach $183.1 billion in 2024, growing at 73.5% year-over-year.
On a geographic basis, year-over-year spending on cloud infrastructure in 3Q24 showed very positive results across all regions where the fastest growing regions were USA and China showing triple digit growth of 148.3% and 100% each, the regions showed double digit growth were APeJC, Japan, Western Europe, Canada and Latin America with 90.3%, 73.5%, 40.1%, 38.5% and 34.8%, respectively. While Middle East & Africa showed on digit growth 6.7%, Central & Eastern Europe was the only one declining at -1.7%.
Long term, IDC predicts spending on cloud infrastructure to have a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 24.2% over the 2023-2028 forecast period, reaching $325.5 billion in 2028 and accounting for 78.8% of total compute and storage infrastructure spend. Shared cloud infrastructure spending will account for 79.1% of the total cloud spending in 2028, growing at a 25.2% CAGR and reaching $257.4 billion. Spending on dedicated cloud infrastructure will grow at a CAGR of 20.7% to $68.2 billion. Spending on non-cloud infrastructure will also rebound with a 7.6% CAGR, reaching $87.5 billion in 2028. Spending by service providers on compute and storage infrastructure is expected to grow at a 17.1% CAGR, reaching $233.0 billion in 2028.

IDC’s Worldwide Quarterly Enterprise Infrastructure Tracker: Buyer and Cloud Deployment is designed to provide clients with a better understanding of what portion of the compute and storage hardware markets are being deployed in cloud environments. The Tracker breaks out each vendors’ revenue into shared and dedicated cloud environments for historical data and provides a five-year forecast. This Tracker is part of the Worldwide Quarterly Enterprise Infrastructure Tracker, which provides a holistic total addressable market view of the four key enabling infrastructure technologies for the datacenter (servers, external enterprise storage systems, and purpose-built appliances: HCI and PBBA).
Taxonomy Notes
IDC defines cloud services more formally through a checklist of key attributes that an offering must manifest to end users of the service.
Shared cloud services are shared among unrelated enterprises and consumers; open to a largely unrestricted universe of potential users; and designed for a market, not a single enterprise. The shared cloud market includes a variety of services designed to extend or, in some cases, replace IT infrastructure deployed in corporate datacenters; these services in total are called public cloud services. The shared cloud market also includes digital services such as media/content distribution, sharing and search, social media, and e-commerce.
Dedicated cloud services are shared within a single enterprise or an extended enterprise with restrictions on access and level of resource dedication and defined/controlled by the enterprise (and beyond the control available in public cloud offerings); can be onsite or offsite; and can be managed by a third-party or in-house staff. In dedicated cloud that is managed by in-house staff, “vendors (cloud service providers)” are equivalent to the IT departments/shared service departments within enterprises/groups. In this utilization model, where standardized services are jointly used within the enterprise/group, business departments, offices, and employees are the “service users.”
For more information about IDC’s Quarterly Enterprise Infrastructure Tracker: Buyer & Cloud Deployment, please contact Lidice Fernandez at lfernandez@idc.com or Juan Pablo Seminara at jseminara@idc.com
About IDC Trackers
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International Data Corporation (IDC) is the premier global provider of market intelligence, advisory services, and events for the information technology, telecommunications, and consumer technology markets. With more than 1,100 analysts worldwide, IDC offers global, regional, and local expertise on technology, IT benchmarking and sourcing, and industry opportunities and trends in over 110 countries. IDC’s analysis and insight helps IT professionals, business executives, and the investment community to make fact-based technology decisions and to achieve their key business objectives. Founded in 1964, IDC is a wholly owned subsidiary of International Data Group (IDG), the world’s leading tech media, data, and marketing services company. To learn more about IDC, please visit www.idc.com. Follow IDC on Twitter at @IDC and LinkedIn. Subscribe to the IDC Blog for industry news and insights.
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