The Department of Homeland Security has awarded Amazon Web Services a $2.6 billion cloud contract running five years, making AWS the first provider to secure a deal under the department’s Cumulus procurement initiative. The announcement, revealed through documents published on June 12, signals the start of a broader restructuring of how DHS buys cloud services across its entire organization.
Cumulus is not a single contract. It is a department-wide framework designed to consolidate cloud procurement, improve oversight of what services different parts of DHS are buying, and create enough collective leverage to negotiate meaningful discounts from major providers. The AWS deal covers the full range of cloud consumption models, spanning infrastructure, platform services, software, professional services, marketplace solutions, and training.
AWS lands first because the rolling award schedule placed it in the second quarter of fiscal 2026. Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure follow in the third quarter, with additional providers expected in the fourth. DHS structured the awards this way specifically to allow adequate time for negotiations, with the stated goal of securing significant discounts off published commercial pricing from each provider.
Total spending figures under the program remain redacted in publicly available documents, though DHS projects saving $142 million in the first year of Cumulus execution alone. That figure gives some sense of the scale of cloud spending currently flowing through the department without the kind of coordinated procurement framework Cumulus establishes.
The pattern here is familiar. Large government departments have long attracted favorable pricing from hyperscalers in exchange for multi-year volume commitments. Last year, AWS offered the General Services Administration up to $1 billion in savings across federal cloud adoption and modernization through 2028. Microsoft rolled out a government-wide acquisition strategy earlier this year. Both Google and Oracle have made comparable discount commitments to federal agencies.
What makes Cumulus worth watching beyond the AWS headline is the framework itself. By consolidating procurement under a single initiative with visibility across the entire department, DHS gains the ability to understand not just what each component is spending, but how cloud investments across different agencies could work together more effectively rather than operating as separate, disconnected contracts.
The remaining awards later this year will complete that picture.
