The AI investment race is accelerating at an unprecedented pace. Google, Amazon, Microsoft, and Meta now plan to spend a combined $725 billion on AI in 2026, up from a $610 billion estimate in February and a 77% jump over last year's record $410 billion, according to the Financial Times. The four companies already burned through $130 billion in the first quarter alone.
| Companies | 2025 (billion $) | 2026 (billion $) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon | 132 | ~200 | +51.5% |
| Alphabet | 92 | up to 190 | +106.5% |
| Meta | 71 | up to 145 | +104.2% |
| Microsoft | 65 | 190 | +192.3% |
| Total | 360 | ~725 | +101.4% |
Google posted standout numbers in its latest quarterly report, with cloud revenue growing 63%. Rising prices for memory chips and other components are pushing costs even higher. Even with these massive investments, Google and Microsoft both say they still don't have enough computing capacity to keep up with demand.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella offered a hint at how the industry plans to recoup this spending: software is shifting from flat per-seat pricing to per-seat pricing plus usage fees. In other words, customers should expect higher bills.