Big Tech Plans $715 Billion AI Infrastructure Spend in 2026

Table of Contents Big Tech’s combined capital expenditure is set to reach a record $715 billion in 2026. Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Meta disclosed the figures during their first-quarter earnings. The surge nearly doubles last year’s spending levels. Companies are directing funds toward data centers, Nvidia GPUs, custom chips, and power systems. The move comes as AI demand grows rapidly across cloud platforms like AWS and Azure. The $715 billion projection marks a 98% year-over-year increase for the four companies combined. That figure is nearly three times the total spent in 2024 and more than five times 2023 levels. Each company is on pace to spend as much in 2026 as in the prior two years combined. Amazon leads the group with capital expenditure approaching $200 billion this year. Alphabet and Microsoft are both guiding toward $190 billion each for 2026. Meta rounded out the group after raising its forecast by $10 billion, now projecting between $125 billion and $145 billion. The Kobeissi Letter noted the scale on X, stating that Big Tech CapEx has reached unprecedented levels. The post pointed out that the combined spend of $AMZN, $GOOG, $META, and $MSFT is expected to surge 98% year-over-year to a record $715 billion in 2026. Big Tech CapEx has reached unprecedented levels: The combined CapEx of Amazon, $AMZN, Google, $GOOG, Meta, $META, and Microsoft, $MSFT, is expected to surge +98% YoY, to a record $715 billion in 2026. This is nearly 3 TIMES the amount spent in 2024 and more than 5 TIMES 2023… pic.twitter.com/L29Dx8JaAi — The Kobeissi Letter (@KobeissiLetter) May 2, 2026 Strong recent revenues are backing these investments across the board. Cloud services, AI tools, and enterprise software have all posted solid growth, giving companies room to commit to large infrastructure buildouts. The capital is flowing primarily into data centers and the hardware needed to run large AI models. Nvidia GPUs remain a central purchase, alongside custom silicon developed in-house by each company. Power systems are also a growing part of the budget as energy demands rise. Supporters of the spending argue it is necessary preparation for the next wave of AI growth. Cloud platforms like AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud are seeing rising demand from enterprise clients and developers building on AI tools. However, not all observers are convinced the returns will follow. Investor Jim Chanos has raised concerns about accounting mismatches in how these costs are reported. He has drawn comparisons to the capital spending patterns seen during the dot-com era. Chanos and other skeptics question whether the revenue generated will justify the scale of investment. The debate centers on timing, with critics arguing that the returns on AI infrastructure may take far longer to materialize than the market currently expects. The discussion is ongoing as earnings season continues to reveal more data.