Google Signs Massive $920 Million-Per-Month AI Compute Deal With SpaceX Amid Surging Gemini Demand
Google has reportedly signed one of the largest AI infrastructure agreements in recent years, securing massive computing capacity from SpaceX in a deal valued at approximately $920 million per month...
Google has reportedly signed one of the largest AI infrastructure agreements in recent years, securing massive computing capacity from SpaceX in a deal valued at approximately $920 million per month through 2029.
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According to a filing submitted to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the agreement will provide Google with large-scale cloud computing infrastructure to support the rapidly growing demand for its artificial intelligence services, particularly the company’s Gemini Enterprise platform.
One of the Biggest AI Infrastructure Deals So Far
The agreement is scheduled to begin in October 2026 and continue through June 2029, with infrastructure capacity gradually ramping up before full deployment.
As part of the arrangement, SpaceX will reportedly provide access to around 110,000 Nvidia GPUs along with CPUs, memory systems, and related computing hardware designed for high-performance AI workloads.
The SEC filing states that either company can terminate the agreement after December 31, 2026, with a 90-day notice period. Google would also retain full ownership of its AI models, intellectual property, and related data hosted on the infrastructure.
The deal highlights the enormous global demand for AI computing resources as major technology companies aggressively expand artificial intelligence products, enterprise platforms, and AI agent ecosystems.
Gemini Enterprise Demand Reportedly Exceeds Expectations
Google said the agreement was driven by unexpectedly strong demand for its AI services, especially Gemini Enterprise.
In a statement, the company described the partnership as a temporary but strategic move designed to secure additional computing capacity while demand continues to rise.
“Google Cloud and SpaceX are long-time partners,” the company reportedly said, adding that the agreement is intended to provide “bridge capacity” for growing enterprise AI workloads.
The filing also notes that Google may terminate the contract if SpaceX fails to deliver the promised Nvidia GPU capacity by September 30, following a one-month grace period.
SpaceX Expands Beyond Space Into AI Infrastructure
For SpaceX, the agreement reflects a broader strategy to monetize excess computing capacity while maintaining flexibility for future internal projects.
The company reportedly said the structure allows it to generate revenue from unused infrastructure resources while still preserving the ability to redirect those systems toward its own initiatives if needed later.
The partnership further strengthens the growing relationship between Google and SpaceX. Google is already among SpaceX’s major investors, and reports suggest both companies are exploring future collaborations involving orbital data centres and space-based computing infrastructure.
Sundar Pichai has previously spoken about the long-term potential of space-based computing systems as AI workloads continue to grow worldwide.
The massive agreement also reflects a broader industry trend in which AI infrastructure, semiconductor access, and cloud computing capacity are becoming some of the most valuable strategic assets in the global technology race.





