TLDR
- Azure has achieved validation status for Nvidia’s Vera Rubin NVL72 system ahead of competing cloud providers
- Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s CEO, shared the achievement via X on Friday
- The NVL72 rack configuration provides 3.6 exaflops of computing power — quintuple the capability of GB200-based predecessors
- Each system integrates 72 GPUs with 36 CPUs through sixth-generation NVLink technology operating at 260TB/s bandwidth
- Deployment plans for Rubin systems extend to Amazon, Google, CoreWeave, Nebius, and Oracle throughout 2026
Azure has claimed a leadership position among cloud infrastructure providers by achieving validation status for Nvidia’s Vera Rubin NVL72 system ahead of its competitors. Satya Nadella revealed the accomplishment Friday afternoon through a post on X, describing the development as “another big step in building the next generation of AI infrastructure.”
We’re the first cloud to bring up an NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 system for validation, another big step in building the next generation of AI infrastructure with NVIDIA. pic.twitter.com/apPyKh0HRK
— Satya Nadella (@satyanadella) March 13, 2026
The Vera Rubin NVL72 represents a rack-scale computing platform integrating 72 Rubin GPUs alongside 36 custom Arm-based Vera CPUs within a unified architecture. Connectivity between GPUs operates through sixth-generation NVLink fabric technology, achieving bandwidth throughput of 260 terabytes per second.
The performance leap represents a substantial advancement in computing capability. Individual NVL72 racks deliver up to 3.6 exaflops of processing power — approximately five times the performance level of the GB200-based systems they succeed.
Rani Borkar, serving as Microsoft’s President of Azure Hardware Systems, indicated this validation resulted from extensive preparation. “Microsoft has years of market-proven experience in designing and deploying scalable AI infrastructure that evolves with every major advancement of AI technology,” Borkar stated.
The “co-design” approach stands central to this achievement. Microsoft has maintained collaborative development efforts with Nvidia spanning interconnects, memory architectures, thermal management, packaging design, and rack-scale engineering over multiple years. This partnership ensures Rubin hardware integrates seamlessly into Azure’s current infrastructure framework — eliminating the need for system overhauls.
Years of Planning Behind the Move
Azure’s data center facilities, including installations in Wisconsin and Atlanta, received engineering specifically designed to accommodate the power density requirements and liquid-cooling infrastructure demanded by NVL72 rack configurations. Such infrastructure development represents multi-year planning cycles.
Borkar verified that Azure’s “superfactories” already possessed the capability to integrate these systems. “Rubin integrates directly into Azure’s platform without rework,” she explained, highlighting the extensive preparation underlying what appears as a straightforward first-mover achievement.
The organization undertook comprehensive redesigns of power distribution and liquid-cooling architectures across numerous facilities to manage the elevated watt density these advanced racks generate. This capital allocation now yields returns through validated hardware while competitors continue their preparation phases.
A BlackRock-led investment group, with participation from Microsoft and Nvidia, recently pursued acquisition of Aligned Data Centers through a $40 billion transaction designed to expand worldwide capacity in anticipation of this emerging hardware generation.
Rivals Still Waiting on Rubin
Microsoft’s leadership position faces limited duration as competitors advance their deployment timelines. Amazon Web Services, Google, CoreWeave, Nebius, and Oracle all maintain plans to implement Vera Rubin systems — with most targeting the latter half of 2026.
Bernstein analysts have characterized Microsoft’s “first-to-validate” status as demonstrating its comprehensive cloud and SaaS efficiency improvements, which they quantify using a “Rule of 37.3%” outperformance framework.
MSFT shares declined 1.57% while NVDA dropped 1.58% on the announcement day, tracking broader market weakness rather than responding negatively to the validation news.
Rubin Ultra, representing the subsequent evolution of this platform, carries an anticipated release timeline of 2027.

