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Cloud Service Providers in India 2026 – GPU, IaaS, and Managed Services Compared

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Carolyn Weitz
Last Updated: May 2, 2026
33 Minute Read
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Picking a cloud provider in India in 2026 is a different problem than it was even two years ago. The Press Information Bureau reports that IndiaAI has empanelled more than 38,000 GPUs through 14 AI cloud service providers under its shared compute initiative, the DPDP Act is being enforced, and the RBI’s new cloud framework has tightened the rules for regulated workloads. The result is a market with more credible options than ever before, and a procurement decision that can quietly cost you crores if you get it wrong.

In this guide we’re going to walk through 18 cloud providers operating in India today, broken into four buyer categories: hyperscalers, GPU first clouds, managed enterprise providers, and hosting specialists. For each one we’ll cover who it’s built for, how it prices, and what to validate before you commit. We’ll also work through pricing comparisons, compliance, industry fit, and a 10 step framework you can use to actually run the evaluation.

By the end you should have enough to build a 3 to 5 vendor shortlist for your specific workload, run a pilot, and avoid the mistakes most Indian buyers make in their first year on a new cloud.

What is a cloud service provider?

A cloud service provider owns and operates the data centers, servers, GPUs, networking, and software platforms, and rents them to customers on demand. You pay for what you use, scale up or down as workloads change, and avoid the cost of buying and maintaining hardware.

In practical terms, you get four things from a cloud service provider: compute (virtual machines, containers, GPUs, or bare metal), storage (block, object, file, or archive), networking (VPCs, load balancers, CDN, firewalls, DDoS), and managed services (databases, Kubernetes, observability, backups, security).

A cloud service provider can be a global hyperscaler like AWS, an Indian cloud service provider like AceCloud or CtrlS, or a niche specialist focused on GPUs, hosting, or a specific industry. Which one fits depends on your workload, compliance scope, and operating model.

Cloud service provider vs cloud hosting provider

The terms get used interchangeably but they sit on a spectrum.

A cloud hosting provider focuses on hosting websites and applications. Think managed VPS, shared hosting, dedicated servers, simple control panels, predictable monthly billing in INR. Cyfuture and Utho are good Indian examples.

A cloud service provider gives you a programmable platform. Open APIs, infrastructure as code, GPUs, Kubernetes, managed databases, multi region replication, IAM, observability, and a deep services catalogue. Hyperscalers and providers like AceCloud belong here.

If you are running a WordPress site or a small ERP, a hosting provider is enough. If you are running production AI, multi tenant SaaS, or workloads with audit obligations, you need a full cloud service provider.

Cloud server provider vs cloud service provider

A cloud server provider sells you compute, usually VPS or bare metal, by the hour or month. Some also offer GPUs, block storage, and snapshots. A full cloud service provider adds the orchestration, automation, networking depth, and managed services that production workloads need. The difference shows up the first time you have to roll out an application across two regions with shared identity and observability.

Cloud service models: IaaS, PaaS, SaaS, FaaS

It helps to pick the service model first and then shortlist providers, because the model determines how much of your stack you’re operating yourself.

ModelWhat you getWhat you manageExamples in India
IaaSVMs, GPUs, storage, networkOS, runtime, app, data, identityAceCloud, AWS EC2, Azure VMs, GCP Compute Engine, E2E Networks
PaaSRuntime, databases, app platformApp code, dataAWS Elastic Beanstalk, Google App Engine, Azure App Service
SaaSFully managed applicationConfigurationZoho, Salesforce, Microsoft 365
FaaS / ServerlessFunction execution on demandCodeAWS Lambda, GCP Functions, Azure Functions
DBaaSManaged databasesSchema, queriesAceCloud Managed Postgres/MySQL, Amazon RDS, Azure SQL
CaaSContainer orchestrationContainers, manifestsAceCloud Managed Kubernetes, EKS, AKS, GKE
DRaaSDisaster recovery on demandRecovery plan, testingAceCloud DR, AWS Elastic DR, Azure Site Recovery
DaaS / VDIVirtual desktopsUser profiles, appsAzure Virtual Desktop, AWS WorkSpaces, AceCloud VDI

For most production workloads in India, IaaS plus a few selective managed services (managed Kubernetes, managed databases, managed backups) is the right starting point. Pure SaaS works for line of business apps. Serverless suits event driven and bursty patterns. Whichever model you pick, build a three year TCO before you sign anything.

Public, private, hybrid, and sovereign cloud

DeploymentWhat it meansWhere it fits in India
Public cloud providerMulti tenant infrastructure shared across many customersSaaS startups, web apps, dev/test, AI training
Private cloudSingle tenant, on prem or hostedBFSI, defence, healthcare with PHI, government
Hybrid cloudMix of public and private with workload portabilityEnterprises modernising while keeping core data on prem
Multi cloudTwo or more public clouds togetherRisk distribution, best of breed services
Sovereign cloudOperations and controls aligned to Indian jurisdictionGovernment, regulated BFSI, IndiaAI mission
Community cloudShared infrastructure for an industry or government groupGovernment departments, regulated consortia

Sovereign cloud is the category growing fastest in 2026, mostly because the DPDP Act, MeitY empanelment, and the RBI cloud framework have made India residency a hard requirement for regulated workloads. Yotta’s Shakti Cloud is the most visible name in this space. AceCloud’s Noida and Mumbai infrastructure also fits these constraints.

How we evaluated providers

We considered providers that meet four criteria: at least one operational data center or active delivery capability in India; self service compute, storage, and networking; INR billing or an Indian billing entity; and presence in at least one of the four buyer categories below (hyperscaler, GPU first, managed enterprise, or hosting).

The evaluation weighed ten factors: India infrastructure footprint, GPU availability, IaaS depth, pricing transparency, compliance posture (DPDP, ISO 27001, SOC 2, RBI, MeitY), SLA and support, migration tooling, ecosystem and partners, vertical or workload specialisation, and customer evidence.

Sources include public pricing pages, official documentation, MeitY empanelment lists, Press Information Bureau (PIB) reports, NASSCOM and IDC India publications, and customer interviews conducted between January and April 2026. Cutoff date is April 28, 2026. GPU and pricing data shifts every few weeks, so confirm directly with the provider before procurement.

Master comparison matrix

ProviderHQIndian regionsGPU SKUsINR billingBest for
AceCloudGurugramNoida, Mumbai (plus Atlanta global)H200, H100, RTX Pro 6000, RTX 6000 Ada, RTX A6000, RTX 8000, A100, L40S, A30, L4, A2YesAI, ML, HPC, rendering, IaaS, GPU backed Kubernetes, Indian SaaS
AWS IndiaSeattle (US)Mumbai, HyderabadA10G, A100, H100 (limited)OptionalGlobal enterprises, mature SaaS, broad managed services
Microsoft AzureRedmond (US)Pune, Chennai, MumbaiA100, H100 (limited)OptionalMicrosoft native enterprises, hybrid cloud
Google CloudMountain View (US)Mumbai, Delhi NCRA100, H100, TPU (limited in India)OptionalData, AI, Kubernetes
Oracle CloudAustin (US)Mumbai, HyderabadA100, H100, B200 (announced)OptionalOracle DB, ERP, performance sensitive workloads
E2E NetworksNew DelhiDelhi, Mumbai, BengaluruH200, H100, A100, L40SYesAI startups, India hosted GPU experiments
YottaMumbai (Hiranandani Group)Navi Mumbai (NM1), Greater Noida (D1), GIFT City (G1)H100 at scaleYesSovereign AI cloud, large GPU clusters
NeysaMumbaiMumbaiH100, A100, L40SYesFractional GPU, MLOps
Jarvis LabsBengaluruIndia regionsH100, A100, L40SYesAI experimentation, per second billing
NeevCloudBengaluruIndia regionsH100, A100YesIndian AI startups
CtrlSHyderabadHyderabad, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Noida (Tier 4 DCs)A100 (limited)YesBFSI, regulated, Tier 4 colocation
Sify TechnologiesChennaiPan India hyperscale DCsLimitedYesHybrid cloud, managed enterprise IT
Tata CommunicationsMumbaiPan India network plus 26% stake in STT GDC IndiaPartner GPUYesNetwork led hybrid cloud, multi cloud connectivity
Iron Mountain Data Centers (formerly Web Werks)MumbaiMumbai, Pune, Delhi NCR, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, NoidaLimitedYesColocation, hybrid, hyperscaler partner
NTT Netmagic (NTT GDC)Mumbai (parent NTT, Tokyo)Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, NoidaLimitedYesEnterprise managed hosting, hybrid
CyfutureNoidaNoida, Jaipur, Bengaluru, Chennai (5 DCs)Entry levelYesManaged hosting, SMBs
UthoGurugramBengaluru, Mumbai, Noida (DC partners)LimitedYesVPS, simple hosting, predictable INR pricing
ESDS Software SolutionNashikNashik, Navi Mumbai (Tier 3 DCs), MeitY empanelledLimitedYesBFSI managed hosting, SAP HANA, public sector

A few notes before you start reading individual sections. Hyperscalers (AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, Oracle) bill in USD by default with INR available as an option. Indian providers bill in INR with full GST. GPU availability shifts week to week across all of them, so the SKUs listed reflect what we could verify through April 2026. Among Indian headquartered providers, AceCloud has the widest GPU catalogue currently, including H200, H100, and the RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell, with B200 on the waitlist.

Hyperscaler cloud providers in India

Pick a hyperscaler when ecosystem breadth, global reach, marketplace depth, or specific platform integrations matter more than INR pricing or fast GPU access. Most large enterprise cloud strategies in India still anchor here.

AWS India

Amazon Web Services runs two cloud regions in India, Asia Pacific (Mumbai) and Asia Pacific (Hyderabad), plus CloudFront edge locations across major metros. The catalogue runs to more than 240 services, the broadest of any cloud globally.

At scale, the AWS advantage is ecosystem depth. Lambda, Aurora, SageMaker, EKS, Outposts, GuardDuty, and Security Hub cover most of what a mature engineering team reaches for, and the marketplace integrations are unmatched globally.

Best for: Enterprises, mature SaaS companies, and global applications needing deep ecosystem and marketplace breadth.

Pricing: USD billing by default, with optional INR invoicing through AWS India. The real bill is shaped by egress (₹2 to ₹8 per GB), NAT gateway, cross AZ traffic, and support tiers. Reserved Instances and Savings Plans cut compute 30 to 75%. An 8x H100 monthly setup in Mumbai lists at roughly ₹42.9 lakh.

Watch outs: Pricing complexity is the number one risk. H100 and H200 availability in Mumbai and Hyderabad is constrained and often quota gated. Run a 30 day workload with full bill simulation before any reserved commitment.

Microsoft Azure

Azure operates three India regions: Pune (Central India), Chennai (South India), and Mumbai (West India). It’s the natural fit for organisations already running Microsoft estates including Entra ID, Windows Server, SQL Server, Microsoft 365, and Dynamics 365.

Hybrid cloud through Azure Arc and Azure Stack HCI, identity led security with Defender, and Azure OpenAI Service keep most Microsoft heavy enterprises from shopping elsewhere.

Best for: Microsoft native enterprises, legacy .NET modernisation, and hybrid cloud with heavy Microsoft identity and security dependencies.

Pricing: USD or INR billing through Microsoft India. Enterprise Agreements and Reserved Instances offer up to 72% off list. Hybrid Benefit cuts further when bringing Windows or SQL Server licences. An 8x H100 monthly setup on Azure South India lists at roughly ₹38.6 lakh.

Watch outs: Licensing is the most opaque area. SQL Server, Windows Server, RDS CALs, and Hybrid Benefit interactions need careful modelling. Verify your specific service is GA in Pune, Chennai, or Mumbai before designing around it.

Google Cloud

Google Cloud has two India regions, Mumbai (asia-south1) and Delhi NCR (asia-south2). It is the only hyperscaler with TPU v4 and v5 accelerators, though TPU availability within India is limited and most TPU workloads route through Asia Northeast or US regions.

BigQuery, Vertex AI, GKE, and Looker are where GCP consistently outperforms the other hyperscalers. Companies building data platforms or heavily Kubernetes native products often end up here.

Best for: Data engineering, AI and ML platforms, Kubernetes first teams, and analytics heavy products.

Pricing: USD or INR billing. Committed Use Discounts cut compute up to 70%, and Sustained Use Discounts apply automatically to long running VMs. New customers get $300 in credits. An 8x H100 monthly setup in Mumbai lists at roughly ₹58.8 lakh, the highest of the three major hyperscalers in India.

Watch outs: Enterprise support and partner ecosystem in India are thinner than AWS or Azure. GPU availability in Indian regions is constrained, so evaluate AceCloud and Yotta for production scale training.

Oracle Cloud Infrastructure

OCI runs Mumbai and Hyderabad regions in India, plus Oracle Cloud@Customer for fully on prem deployments. Oracle has priced GPU instances (A100, H100, and announced B200) aggressively and committed to bare metal performance benchmarks that often edge out the other hyperscalers.

Outside Oracle workloads the platform is narrower, but if your stack is Oracle Database, E-Business Suite, Fusion ERP, or JD Edwards, OCI is the strongest migration path.

Best for: Oracle Database and ERP workloads, and performance sensitive migrations from on prem Oracle.

Pricing: USD or INR billing with Universal Credits flexible across services. GPU pricing for A100 and H100 is typically lower than AWS or Azure. New customers get $300 in credits.

Watch outs: Third party ecosystem is shallower outside Oracle stacks. Non Oracle migrations need an explicit pilot before commitment.

IBM Cloud

IBM Cloud has a smaller India footprint than the other hyperscalers and primarily shows up in accounts where IBM Power Systems, IBM Z mainframe compatibility, or the watsonx AI platform are already in scope. Its India presence is strongest in BFSI and government, where IBM has deep historic relationships.

If those aren’t your constraints, the GPU catalogue and cloud native developer experience are narrower than AWS, Azure, or GCP.

Best for: BFSI and government accounts with existing IBM relationships, Power or mainframe modernisation, and regulated AI under watsonx.

Pricing: USD or INR billing. A Lite plan is available for free trials. Pricing varies widely by workload type.

Watch outs: Most relevant when IBM platforms are already part of the stack. Cloud native ecosystem and GPU catalogue are thinner than the other four hyperscalers.

GPU and AI first cloud providers in India

GPU first clouds are where most of the cloud activity in India has happened over the last 18 months. The hyperscalers compete here too, but Indian providers tend to win on provisioning speed and INR pricing, particularly for AI training and inference workloads.

AceCloud

AceCloud is a brand of Real Time Data Services (RTDS), founded by Vinay Chhabra and Dr. Sangeeta Chhabra and headquartered in Gurugram, Haryana. It runs three regions: Noida (launched in late 2024 with NetApp block and Quantum ActiveScale object storage, purpose built for AI and HPC), Mumbai, and Atlanta for global workloads. RTDS supports more than 20,000 customers across India, the US, and the UK.

The GPU catalogue is the widest of any India headquartered cloud: H200, H100, RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell, RTX 6000 Ada, RTX A6000, RTX 8000, A100, L40S, A30, L4, A2, with B200 on the waitlist. On top of that sits a full IaaS stack (VPC, load balancer, CDN, DDoS protection, spot compute), managed Kubernetes, managed PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, Redis, Kafka and RabbitMQ, block and object storage, cross region DR with migration paths from AWS, Azure, GCP and on prem, and managed OpenShift on NetApp. Free migration is included, with an engineer assigned to the cutover. AceCloud holds ISO 27001 certification, is a Gartner Trusted Cloud Partner, and carries a 99.99% uptime SLA backed by service credits and 24/7 India based support.

Best for: AI, ML, HPC, VFX, GPU backed Kubernetes, Indian SaaS, and production IaaS where INR billing, no egress, and India residency matter.

Pricing: INR billing with full GST invoicing. An 8x H100 monthly setup runs at approximately ₹16 lakh, versus ₹38.6 lakh on Azure, ₹42.9 lakh on AWS, and ₹58.8 lakh on Google Cloud. Egress is included. New users get ₹20,000 in free credits.

Watch outs: Confirm GPU stock for your specific model, region availability between Noida and Mumbai, and storage IOPS for your workload before going to production.

E2E Networks

E2E Networks is a New Delhi based GPU cloud, founded in 2009 by Tarun Dua and listed on NSE Emerge in 2018. It has secured a ₹177 crore order from the IndiaAI Mission for GPU allocation and runs more than 2,000 H200 GPUs and 800+ H100s across its Delhi, Mumbai, and Bengaluru data centers.

The platform is transparent and developer friendly with simple INR hourly pricing, no hidden charges, and a console that gets you to a running GPU instance in under five minutes. Indian AI startups including Zomato, CarDekho, Cars24, HealthKart, and 1mg scaled on E2E during their growth years.

Best for: AI startups, ML developers, and cost conscious teams running training and inference workloads within India.

Pricing: H100 at ₹249/hr on demand, ₹70/hr on spot. A100 80GB at ₹220/hr. L4 from ₹50/hr. Monthly committed pricing saves 20 to 30%.

Watch outs: Managed services depth (managed databases, multi region orchestration) is thinner than AceCloud’s. Validate support escalation paths before moving production workloads.

Yotta

Yotta Data Services is part of the Hiranandani Group, with Darshan Hiranandani as Chairman and Sunil Gupta as Managing Director and CEO. It runs three Tier 4 data centers: NM1 in Panvel, Navi Mumbai (820,000 sq ft, 7,200 racks, Asia’s largest Tier 4 facility), D1 in Greater Noida (300,000 sq ft, 5,000 racks), and G1 in GIFT City, Gandhinagar.

Shakti Cloud is the sovereign AI cloud layer on top of this infrastructure. Yotta has announced a partnership with the Telangana government for a 25,000 GPU AI supercomputer in Hyderabad and is the most prominent name in India’s government aligned AI compute push.

Best for: Sovereign AI workloads, government aligned AI projects, and large scale H100 cluster deployments under IndiaAI and state AI missions.

Pricing: Quote based for enterprise customers. Not designed for short cycle experimentation.

Watch outs: Built around large enterprise and committed spend customers. Smaller AI teams typically find AceCloud or E2E Networks more accessible for getting started.

Neysa

Mumbai based Neysa is built around fractional GPU access with MLOps tooling included. Rather than billing you for a whole GPU node, it lets you consume a fraction of one and scale from there, which makes the entry cost lower for early stage teams that don’t yet have continuous workloads.

The platform includes Kubernetes native environments and pre integrated MLOps workflows, so you’re not assembling tooling from scratch.

Best for: Early stage AI startups that need GPU access without committing to whole node billing.

Pricing: Fractional GPU consumption, billed on actual usage with MLOps environments included.

Watch outs: Less suited for large scale training runs or enterprise SLA requirements.

Jarvis Labs

Bengaluru based Jarvis Labs is a developer first GPU cloud with per second billing and a console built for ML engineers who want to spin up, run an experiment, and shut down without paying for idle time. It is one of the few Indian providers that bills at per second granularity.

It supports H100, A100, and L40S GPUs and is particularly well suited for iterative experimentation where workloads run in short bursts.

Best for: AI experimentation, model evaluation, and ML engineers who run short bursty workloads.

Pricing: Per second billing on H100, A100, and L40S. No long term commitments required.

Watch outs: Not designed for production workloads with enterprise SLA or managed services requirements.

NeevCloud

NeevCloud is a Bengaluru based AI cloud focused on Indian startups, with H100 and A100 GPUs, India resident data, and rupee billing. It targets the segment of early stage teams that want simple onboarding without needing to navigate enterprise procurement.

The platform is straightforward by design. You pick a GPU, get credentials, and start running. It does not yet carry the managed services depth of AceCloud or the GPU scale of E2E Networks.

Best for: Early stage Indian AI startups wanting straightforward GPU access with INR billing.

Pricing: Pay as you go with INR billing. Quote based for larger workloads.

Watch outs: Managed services and enterprise SLA capabilities are limited at this stage.

Enterprise managed and hybrid cloud providers

This category covers regulated industries, large enterprises, and organisations that need managed infrastructure, colocation, hybrid cloud, and Tier 4 grade physical standards. The buying motion here is procurement led rather than developer led, and contracts are usually multi year.

CtrlS Datacenters

CtrlS, founded in 2007 and headquartered in Hyderabad, runs Tier 4 data centers in Hyderabad, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Noida, and Chennai across roughly one million square feet. It serves over 3,500 customers including 15 Fortune 100 and 25 ET 100 companies.

The positioning is around physical infrastructure standards, compliance documentation, and long running managed contracts rather than developer self service. In BFSI, regulated healthcare, and government, CtrlS often shows up as the colocation or private cloud layer while a second provider handles public cloud compute. A common pairing is CtrlS for regulated colocation and AceCloud for modern GPU and IaaS workloads.

Best for: BFSI, regulated industries, private cloud, DRaaS, and Tier 4 colocation with strict physical compliance requirements.

Pricing: Quote based, customised by rack, MW, and managed service scope. INR billing with full GST.

Watch outs: Cloud native developer experience and GPU breadth are limited. Not the right fit as a standalone public cloud platform.

Sify Technologies

Sify, founded in 1995 and headquartered in Chennai, is a full stack enterprise ICT provider covering data centers, cloud, network, and managed services under one contract. Its cloud portfolio spans hybrid cloud, multi cloud management, AWS and Azure managed services, and its own CloudInfinit platform. Hyperscale campus expansions at Noida and Hyderabad are planned to reach 250+ MW of IT capacity.

The main reason enterprises choose Sify is the single vendor model: one contract for data center, network, cloud, and security is simpler to manage than separate providers, especially in regulated industries.

Best for: Enterprise managed cloud, hybrid cloud, and regulated IT where a single technology partner for cloud, network, and data center is preferred.

Pricing: Quote based, priced on workload complexity. INR billing.

Watch outs: Public cloud feature depth and developer self service are not the strengths here. Works best when managed services and single vendor accountability matter more than platform breadth.

Tata Communications

Tata Communications, headquartered in Mumbai, was renamed from VSNL in 2008. In 2016 it divested 74% of its India and Singapore data center business to ST Telemedia and now holds a 26% stake in STT GDC India, pivoting its own offering toward enterprise connectivity and managed cloud orchestration.

Where it’s strongest is as the network layer underneath a multi cloud architecture: SD-WAN, dedicated connectivity into AWS Direct Connect, Azure ExpressRoute, and Google Cloud Interconnect, and managed cloud across multiple providers for large enterprises with heavy inter region traffic.

Best for: Large enterprises needing network led hybrid or multi cloud connectivity across providers and geographies.

Pricing: Quote based for managed cloud, network, and connectivity bundles. INR billing.

Watch outs: Cloud compute depth and GPU access lag GPU first providers. Works best paired with AceCloud or a hyperscaler for compute, with Tata providing the network fabric.

Iron Mountain Data Centers (formerly Web Werks)

Web Werks was founded in 1996 by Nikhil and Nishant Rathi in Mumbai as one of India’s earliest data center operators. After a four year joint venture, Iron Mountain (Boston) acquired full ownership in April 2025 for around $164 million. The combined India footprint covers six Tier 3 data centers in Mumbai, Pune, Delhi NCR, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and Noida.

Three new campuses are under development in Mumbai, Chennai, and Noida with a planned combined capacity of 152 MW, positioning Iron Mountain as one of the larger data center operators in India over the next few years.

Best for: Colocation, hyperscaler partner deployments, and hybrid cloud for enterprises that need Tier 3 grade infrastructure with global Iron Mountain backing.

Pricing: Colocation and managed services priced by rack, power, and cross connects. INR billing.

Watch outs: Cloud native IaaS and managed platform services are not the focus. Choose this for data center real estate and connectivity, not for compute or GPU workloads.

NTT Netmagic (NTT Global Data Centers)

NTT Netmagic runs data center and managed cloud facilities in Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, and Noida. Backed by NTT Ltd (Tokyo), it combines local India operations with the global NTT network and enterprise support structure, which matters to multinational enterprises that want a consistent vendor relationship across regions.

The offering covers colocation, private cloud, and managed cloud, with SLA backed tiers and a support model built for large Indian enterprise accounts.

Best for: Large enterprises wanting Tier 3 or Tier 4 managed hosting with global parent credibility and pan India footprint.

Pricing: Quote based with INR billing and SLA backed managed services tiers.

Watch outs: Cloud native developer experience and GPU capabilities are limited compared to AceCloud or the hyperscalers.

Cloud hosting providers in India

If you’re running websites, e-commerce, web apps, ERPs, or SaaS workloads where scale is predictable, the providers below are simpler and often cheaper than full IaaS platforms. They also tend to come with more hand holding on setup.

Cyfuture

Cyfuture, founded in 2001 by Anuj Bairathi and headquartered in Noida, is a CMMI Level 5 managed hosting and cloud provider with five data centers across India including a recent expansion to Chennai. It serves more than 1,000 clients including Fortune 500 names, primarily through a support led delivery model.

Services cover cloud hosting, VPS, entry level GPU cloud hosting, bare metal, and colocation. Cyfuture positions itself as a provider that manages the infrastructure on your behalf rather than handing you a console and stepping back.

Best for: SMBs and mid market enterprises that want managed hosting with active support rather than full self service.

Pricing: Monthly INR plans for VPS, dedicated, and managed cloud hosting. Quote based for enterprise workloads.

Watch outs: GPU depth, managed Kubernetes, and compliance documentation are limited compared to AceCloud or the hyperscalers.

Utho

Utho, founded in 2010 by Manoj and Kusum Dhanda, has its registered office in Gurugram with operations in Noida and engineers at partner data centers in Bengaluru and Mumbai. It serves around 25,000 active users and a significant share of India’s cloud telephony traffic reportedly runs on Utho infrastructure.

The appeal is simplicity and price predictability. INR billing, a clean console, and straightforward monthly plans without the complexity of reserved instances, support tiers, or egress modelling.

Best for: Startups, SMBs, and developers running VPS workloads who want predictable INR pricing with no surprises.

Pricing: Pay as you go or monthly INR billing, no long term commitment required.

Watch outs: Enterprise SLA, GPU access, Kubernetes, and compliance documentation are limited. Step up to AceCloud when workloads outgrow VPS.

ESDS Software Solution

ESDS, founded in 2005 by Piyush Somani and headquartered in Nashik, runs two data centers (Nashik and Navi Mumbai) with the Mumbai facility holding Uptime Institute Tier 3 certification. It is STQC audited and MeitY empanelled, which puts it on the shortlist for public sector contracts and BFSI procurement where government certification is a requirement.

The platform focuses on managed hosting, SAP HANA, and eNlight cloud technology for Indian mid market clients, particularly those in BFSI, pharma, and public sector that need a compliant Indian provider without the complexity of a hyperscaler.

Best for: BFSI managed hosting, public sector cloud, SAP HANA, and MeitY empanelled workloads.

Pricing: Quote based, priced on workload size and SLA tier. INR billing with full GST.

Watch outs: Not a fit for GPU workloads, modern Kubernetes deployments, or teams that need broad IaaS self service.

Cloud pricing in India

The headline GPU per hour or VM per hour rate is the part of cloud pricing everyone looks at, and it’s also the part that matters least at scale. You need to model the full stack before you commit, or you’ll be surprised in month four.

Cost componentWhy it matters
ComputeBase VM or bare metal cost. Reserved or spot can cut 30 to 70%.
GPU hoursLargest single line item for AI workloads.
StorageBlock, object, archive. Snapshot retention often runs 2 to 3 times the active dataset.
BandwidthInbound usually free, outbound varies.
EgressData leaving the cloud. The single biggest hidden cost on hyperscalers.
Support tierEnterprise tiers add 3 to 10% of monthly spend.
Managed servicesSaves engineering time, adds platform cost.
Backups and DRCross region replicas, vault storage. Required for compliance.
ObservabilityLogs, metrics, traces at production scale. Scales aggressively.

INR billing vs USD billing

If your business is incorporated in India and your customers pay in INR, USD billing on hyperscalers introduces FX risk, GST credit complications, and procurement friction. Indian providers including AceCloud, E2E Networks, Yotta, CtrlS, Sify, Tata Communications, Cyfuture, and ESDS bill in INR with full GST invoicing. For mid sized Indian businesses, that often translates into a 5 to 10% effective cost saving just from FX and GST treatment.

What an 8x H100 cluster actually costs in India

For an 8x H100 (80 GB each) monthly cluster on list pricing, before any reserved or commitment discounts:

ProviderMonthly cost
AceCloud~₹16 lakh
Microsoft Azure~₹38.6 lakh
AWS~₹42.9 lakh
Google Cloud~₹58.8 lakh

Source: AceCloud’s January 2026 cloud GPU pricing comparison. Numbers reflect listed prices in INR, exclude taxes, exclude egress, and exclude reserved or sustained use discounts. AceCloud comes in roughly 63% cheaper than AWS, 59% cheaper than Azure, and 73% cheaper than Google Cloud for the same configuration. For a one year run, that is between ₹2.7 crore and ₹5.1 crore in difference, before egress is factored in. Always validate with a 30 day pilot using your real workload pattern.

Compliance and sovereignty: DPDP, RBI, MeitY, ISO, and SOC

Compliance has stopped being a procurement checkbox in India. With the DPDP Act 2023 now in enforcement and the DPDP Rules 2026 active, it’s an architecture constraint that shapes which providers you can even consider.

DPDP Act 2023

The DPDP Act regulates how personal data of Indian residents is collected, processed, stored, and shared. For cloud service providers, the implications are:

  • Customers remain the data fiduciary, but the cloud provider must support that role with the right controls.
  • Cross border transfer is permitted only to notified jurisdictions.
  • Consent management, breach notification within 72 hours, and data principal rights (access, correction, erasure, portability, grievance).
  • Logging, audit trails, and access controls that can be produced to the Data Protection Board on demand.
  • Sub processor disclosure for any downstream cloud or SaaS provider.

A DPDP ready cloud provider gives you India resident infrastructure, audit logs, IAM, encryption at rest and in transit, breach detection, and incident response playbooks aligned to DPDP timelines. AceCloud, CtrlS, Sify, Yotta, ESDS, and Tata Communications are well positioned. Hyperscalers are configurable but require explicit architecture choices to avoid cross border data flow.

RBI Cloud Framework for BFSI

The RBI’s December 2024 cloud framework for regulated entities mandates risk based outsourcing with documented governance, Indian data residency for sensitive financial data, right to audit clauses in cloud contracts, concentration risk management across providers, and exit and portability planning at contract signing.

Indian providers operating from Indian data centers tend to simplify this. AceCloud, ESDS, CtrlS, and Yotta routinely sign right to audit clauses. Hyperscalers will, but it usually takes negotiation.

IRDAI, SEBI, and CERT-In

IRDAI requires India resident policyholder data, audit, and breach reporting. SEBI tightens cybersecurity controls for stock exchanges, depositories, and intermediaries. CERT-In’s April 2022 directions, reinforced in 2025, require 180 day log retention, KYC for VPN and VPS providers, and breach reporting within six hours.

Common certification matrix

CertificationCoverageWhy it matters
ISO 27001 / 27017 / 27018Information security and cloud specific controlsBaseline for enterprise procurement
SOC 2 Type IIOperational controls audited over 6 to 12 monthsStandard for SaaS and US enterprise contracts
PCI DSSPayment card dataRequired for processors and e-commerce
HIPAAUS healthcare PHIRequired for serving US healthcare
MeitY EmpanelmentGovernment cloud eligibility in IndiaRequired for public sector contracts
STQC certificationQuality and security for government ITGovernment procurement gate
CSA STARCloud specific security maturityInternational cloud trust marker

AceCloud holds ISO 27001 certification and operates DPDP aligned infrastructure from its Noida and Mumbai regions, with US workloads handled in Atlanta.

Best cloud provider by industry

BFSI: banks, NBFCs, fintech, capital markets

Cloud strategy in BFSI is shaped by RBI, SEBI, IRDAI, and DPDP. A common pattern is a hyperscaler (AWS or Azure) for global reach plus AceCloud or CtrlS for India resident regulated workloads, sovereign DR, and GPU backed AI use cases like fraud detection, KYC OCR, and credit scoring. ESDS is a credible standalone for managed BFSI hosting, particularly for SAP HANA.

Healthcare and pharma

Patient data, clinical trials, and PHI need India residency, DPDP compliance, and often HIPAA for US facing operations. Use AceCloud for AI workloads (medical imaging, NLP on clinical notes), CtrlS or Sify for managed regulated hosting, and Azure for Microsoft heavy hospitals.

E-commerce and D2C

Festive season scale, payment integration, CDN delivery, and INR billing dominate. AceCloud fits Indian only D2C, AWS or GCP fit global e-commerce, and CDN, autoscaling, and WAF are non negotiable across all of them.

Media, OTT, gaming, and VFX

GPU rendering, low latency streaming, large object storage, and global CDN. AceCloud (with RTX Pro 6000, RTX A6000, RTX 8000, and L40S) fits VFX and rendering well. AWS or GCP fit global OTT distribution.

Manufacturing and Industry 4.0

IoT ingestion, predictive maintenance, digital twins, edge compute. Azure (IoT Hub, Digital Twins) or AWS (IoT Core, SiteWise) handle ingestion. AceCloud handles edge AI inference and GPU training.

EdTech

Video delivery at scale, AI grading, low latency to Tier 2 and 3 cities. AceCloud for AI workloads and India resident video processing, AWS or GCP for global EdTech, Cyfuture for managed hosting in cost sensitive segments.

Government and public sector

MeitY empanelment is the gate. Yotta Shakti Cloud, AWS, Azure (sovereign), CtrlS, ESDS, and NIC are the names that matter. AceCloud serves public sector AI projects under MeitY aligned controls.

SaaS startups

Predictable INR pricing, fast provisioning, GPU access, no egress. AceCloud as the primary cloud, with selective AWS or GCP services for global edge or specialised PaaS.

Logistics and supply chain

Real time tracking, route optimisation, IoT, ML forecasting. AceCloud for ML workloads, AWS or GCP for global supply chain visibility platforms.

Best cloud provider by workload

AI/ML training and inference. AceCloud, E2E Networks, and Yotta lead in India. Hyperscalers compete but Indian GPU first providers usually win on provisioning speed and cost.

LLM fine tuning, RAG, vector workloads. AceCloud (H200 and H100 with managed Kubernetes), Yotta Shakti, Neysa for fractional GPU.

HPC and scientific computing. AceCloud, Yotta, AWS ParallelCluster, Azure CycleCloud. Validate MPI ready networking and parallel filesystem performance.

VFX and 3D rendering. AceCloud (RTX Pro 6000, RTX A6000, RTX 8000), AWS Thinkbox Deadline, Azure Batch Rendering. AceCloud’s visual AI GPU portfolio fits Indian VFX studios well.

Web hosting and applications. Cyfuture, Utho, AceCloud, AWS Lightsail. Choose based on budget and required automation.

Database modernisation. AceCloud Managed Postgres/MySQL/MariaDB/Redis, Amazon RDS or Aurora, Azure SQL, GCP Cloud SQL.

Disaster recovery. AceCloud DR (cross region, AWS to AceCloud, Azure to AceCloud, GCP to AceCloud, on prem to AceCloud), AWS Elastic DR, Azure Site Recovery.

VDI and virtual desktops. Azure Virtual Desktop, AWS WorkSpaces, AceCloud VDI for INR billing and GPU backed desktops for designers and engineers.

How to choose: 10 step framework

Most cloud selections in India still happen on the back of vendor demos, and most of them go wrong within 18 months. The fix is treating selection as a structured, scored evaluation. The 10 steps below are what we’d actually run for a customer.

  1. Define the workload category and SLOs. Document uptime, RTO, RPO, latency, throughput, and concurrency.
  2. Estimate the compute shape. CPU cores, RAM, GPU class and count, storage IOPS, network egress.
  3. Model pricing for three years. On demand, spot, reserved, storage tiers, egress, support, observability, backups. Don’t stop at headline VM rates.
  4. Map compliance constraints. DPDP, RBI, IRDAI, SEBI, CERT-In, HIPAA, PCI DSS, ISO 27001, SOC 2, MeitY.
  5. Validate India residency and sovereignty. Get explicit confirmation in writing about where data lives, who has access, and how cross border flows are controlled.
  6. Run latency and throughput benchmarks from your actual user geographies (Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, and Tier 2 cities).
  7. Evaluate Kubernetes and managed services maturity. Upgrade cadence, autoscaling, backup, IAM integration, observability.
  8. Test migration paths and rollback. Run a representative migration and document the rollback procedure.
  9. Run a paid pilot for 30 to 60 days with real observability and a defined success metric: cost variance, performance versus baseline, support response time.
  10. Score on a weighted matrix. Negotiate exit clauses, right to audit, data portability, and price protection before signing.

Want a ready made scorecard? AceCloud’s solutions team can share a vendor evaluation template tailored to your industry. Book a consultation and we’ll send it across.

✨ Save up to 60% vs hyperscalers
Looking for the right cloud provider in India?

Run AI, ML, HPC, Kubernetes and IaaS workloads on AceCloud with transparent pricing, high-performance NVIDIA GPUs and India-focused cloud support.

✅ No egress fees ✅ INR billing ✅ Pay-as-You-Go ✅ 24/7 India support

Common mistakes Indian buyers make

  1. Choosing on brand instead of workload fit. A Fortune 500 logo on the provider doesn’t guarantee the right India region, the right GPU stock, or a sensible pricing model for your usage pattern.
  2. Ignoring egress and inter region transfer when modelling cost. Egress is the largest hidden line item on hyperscalers and the easiest one to forget at procurement time.
  3. Skipping the pilot and signing on the demo. Demos are designed to look good. Pilots are designed to surface the things that don’t work.
  4. Under modelling support tier costs. Production SLAs usually need Business or Enterprise support, which adds 3 to 10% to monthly spend.
  5. Forgetting INR vs USD friction. FX, GST credit, and procurement workflow matter more in practice than they do in spreadsheets.
  6. Locking into reserved instances too early. Wait until usage stabilises after 90 days, then commit.
  7. Neglecting exit planning. Negotiate data export, format compatibility, and timeline at signing, not at exit.
  8. Treating sovereignty as optional. DPDP, RBI, and IRDAI enforcement is now real, and architecting around it later is expensive.

Why AceCloud is built for Indian workloads

We’ve been operating cloud infrastructure out of India since well before the GPU boom, so this section reflects what we actually do day to day, not what a marketing page says.

AceCloud is run by Real Time Data Services from Gurugram, with infrastructure in Noida, Mumbai, and Atlanta. The Noida region was built specifically for AI and HPC in late 2024 with NetApp block storage and Quantum ActiveScale object storage underneath. Mumbai serves western and southern India, and Atlanta gives customers a US footprint when they need to be close to North American users or comply with US contractual terms.

If you’re running AI or ML, you’ll find the broadest NVIDIA Hopper and Blackwell class catalogue from any India headquartered cloud, including H200, H100, RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell, RTX 6000 Ada, A100, and L40S. GPUs provision in hours rather than weeks, managed Kubernetes is included, and AI frameworks come pre built so you’re not spending day one configuring CUDA drivers.

If you’re running production SaaS or IaaS, the maths is simpler. INR billing with full GST credit, no egress charges, and 24/7 India based support take 40 to 60% off equivalent hyperscaler bills. An 8x H100 cluster that costs around ₹42.9 lakh per month on AWS lists at roughly ₹16 lakh on AceCloud, and that’s before egress is factored in.

For regulated workloads, the Noida and Mumbai infrastructure, ISO 27001 certification, DPDP aligned architecture, and right to audit clauses tend to shorten BFSI, healthcare, and public sector procurement cycles meaningfully.

Migration is included rather than a separate paid engagement. The team has done VMware to cloud, AWS to AceCloud, Azure to AceCloud, GCP to AceCloud, and on prem to cloud cutovers, and an engineer is assigned to each one rather than pointing you at a self service portal.

The thing we hear most often from customers is that there’s no lock in. Open APIs, Kubernetes standard interfaces, Terraform support, and free egress mean you can leave when your strategy changes. Most don’t, but we’d rather you stay because the platform fits than because exit is painful.

You can validate any of this with ₹20,000 in free credits, no credit card required. That’s enough to run an actual pilot with real GPU workloads, not a demo.

Frequently Asked Questions

The best cloud service provider in India depends on workload fit. For AI, ML, HPC, rendering, and IaaS workloads with INR billing and India resident operations, AceCloud is the leading Indian headquartered choice, operating from Gurugram with data centers in Noida, Mumbai, and Atlanta. For broad enterprise platforms with global reach, AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud remain the default. For Tier 4 regulated colocation and managed cloud, CtrlS, Sify, and Tata Communications are credible.

A cloud service provider owns and operates data centers, servers, GPUs, networking, and software platforms, and rents them to customers on demand. Customers pay only for what they use, scale up or down, and offload provisioning, patching, cooling, and physical security to the provider.

A cloud hosting provider focuses on hosting websites and applications with managed VPS, shared hosting, and predictable monthly billing. A cloud service provider offers a broader platform with GPUs, Kubernetes, managed databases, multi region replication, and a programmable API surface. AceCloud is a full cloud service provider. Cyfuture and Utho are closer to cloud hosting providers.

For simple cloud hosting and VPS workloads, Utho and Cyfuture are popular choices. ESDS is the established option for managed hosting in BFSI and public sector. For workloads that outgrow VPS (AI, GPU, Kubernetes, multi region), step up to AceCloud or a hyperscaler.

A public cloud provider operates multi tenant infrastructure shared by many customers, with isolation enforced through virtualisation. AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, Oracle Cloud, AceCloud, E2E Networks, and Yotta are public cloud providers serving the Indian market.

For India hosted GPU workloads, AceCloud (H200, H100, RTX Pro 6000, A100, L40S), E2E Networks, and Yotta Shakti are the strongest options. AceCloud offers the broadest NVIDIA Hopper and Blackwell class GPU range from any Indian headquartered cloud, at roughly 63% lower monthly cost than AWS for an 8x H100 cluster on list pricing.

Indian startups should prioritise predictable INR pricing, fast GPU provisioning, no egress billing, and responsive support. AceCloud meets these with ₹20,000 in free credits to start. Add AWS or GCP only when you need a specific managed service or global edge presence.

For comparable GPU and IaaS configurations, yes. An 8x H100 monthly cluster on AceCloud lists at around ₹16 lakh, versus roughly ₹38.6 lakh on Azure, ₹42.9 lakh on AWS, and ₹58.8 lakh on Google Cloud, before reserved discounts and egress. Validate with a pilot using your real workload before committing.

Sovereign cloud refers to environments designed to align with Indian compliance and access expectations, with operations, controls, and personnel within Indian jurisdiction. Yotta Shakti Cloud, AceCloud, and CtrlS operate India resident infrastructure suitable for sovereign workloads. It is often evaluated alongside data residency requirements under DPDP, the RBI cloud framework, and IRDAI guidelines.

Use a 10 step framework: define workload SLOs, estimate compute shape, model three year pricing, map compliance, validate residency, benchmark latency, evaluate Kubernetes maturity, test migration, run a 30 to 60 day pilot, and score on a weighted matrix before signing. Don’t skip the pilot.

Multi cloud reduces lock in risk and improves economics for specific workloads, but it increases governance overhead. A practical pattern is one primary cloud (often AceCloud for India resident workloads or AWS or Azure for global) plus one secondary for DR and best of breed services. Always design a unified IAM, observability, and cost management layer across providers.

The leading cloud service provider companies in India in 2026 are AceCloud, AWS India, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, IBM Cloud, E2E Networks, Yotta, CtrlS, Sify, Tata Communications, NTT Netmagic, Iron Mountain Data Centers (formerly Web Werks), Cyfuture, ESDS, and Utho. Choose based on workload fit, compliance posture, and total cost of ownership.

AceCloud is operated by Real Time Data Services (RTDS), a group with 600+ employees across India, the US, and the UK supporting more than 20,000 customers. It holds ISO 27001 certification, has been recognised as a Gartner Trusted Cloud Partner and a 2024 Stevie Award winner for sales and customer service, and operates a 99.99% uptime SLA across its Gurugram headquarters and three data center regions in Noida, Mumbai, and Atlanta.

Carolyn Weitz's profile image
Carolyn Weitz
author
Carolyn began her cloud career at a fast-growing SaaS company, where she led the migration from on-prem infrastructure to a fully containerized, cloud-native architecture using Kubernetes. Since then, she has worked with a range of companies from early-stage startups to global enterprises helping them implement best practices in cloud operations, infrastructure automation, and container orchestration. Her technical expertise spans across AWS, Azure, and GCP, with a focus on building scalable IaaS environments and streamlining CI/CD pipelines. Carolyn is also a frequent contributor to cloud-native open-source communities and enjoys mentoring aspiring engineers in the Kubernetes ecosystem.

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