Oracle just moved into Amazon’s house—and brought its own hardware. With the general launch of Oracle Database@AWS in two U.S. regions, Oracle has taken a long-anticipated step by placing its Exadata systems directly inside AWS data centers. It’s a move that sidesteps traditional cloud rivalry and instead leans into a growing trend: strategic coexistence.
The service is now available in Northern Virginia and Oregon, with expansion plans that span 20 more AWS regions worldwide. For enterprise clients, this means they can now run high-performance Oracle databases inside AWS infrastructure without having to rework legacy applications. The underlying idea is simple: keep latency low, avoid massive rewrites, and tap into both Oracle’s database engine and AWS’s expanding AI toolset in one stroke.
This arrangement didn’t appear overnight. Oracle and AWS first teased the collaboration last year, rolling it out in preview in December. Now, with early adopters like Fidelity and Nationwide already onboard, the offering opens to the broader market. It marks Oracle’s latest maneuver in its multi-cloud campaign, which also includes similar integrations with Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud.
What makes this development interesting isn’t just the technology. The major cloud providers aren’t stubbornly building walls around their own platforms anymore. They’re interconnecting services, focusing on what enterprises need instead of clinging to brand boundaries.
For users, this shift means you can deploy and manage workloads with way more flexibility—location and platform aren’t these rigid limitations now. Basically, the tech is catching up to real-world business demands.
Executives at both companies are framing the launch as a win for users managing complex data environments. Enterprises can now move Oracle workloads into AWS without rewriting code, and still benefit from the performance tuning of Oracle’s Exadata and the broader analytics and generative AI offerings on AWS.
The move also deepens Oracle’s presence in AI-era workloads, pairing Oracle Database 23ai with AWS’s expanding machine learning tools. In an environment where speed, security, and interoperability carry more weight than cloud loyalty, this might be less a truce—and more a blueprint for what comes next.
