Amazon Web Services to Deliver Up to $1 Billion in Savings to U.S. Government for Cloud Modernization

Amazon Web Services (AWS) has entered into an agreement with the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) to provide federal government agencies with up to $1 billion in savings through incentives aimed at cloud adoption, IT modernization, and training programs. This initiative is set to run through the end of 2028 and is designed to accelerate large-scale digital transformation across government departments while fostering innovation in artificial intelligence.

The U.S. federal government spends over $100 billion annually managing and updating its IT infrastructure, a process historically challenged by outdated systems. AWS, which supports more than 11,000 government agencies worldwide, has secured billions in contracts to assist in transitioning federal agencies to cloud-based platforms.

The $1 billion incentive credits will be distributed across civilian federal agencies and include savings on core AWS cloud services, modernization efforts, and training resources. AWS CEO Matt Garman described the deal as a “significant milestone” in government digital transformation, highlighting the provision of expert support and training to facilitate cloud migration.

The agreement aligns with broader federal efforts to reduce IT costs, improve efficiency, enhance innovation, and maintain U.S. leadership in AI technologies. In recent years, the Pentagon has awarded multi-billion dollar cloud contracts to AWS and other tech giants such as Microsoft, Google, and Oracle. This follows the Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability program, a successor to the controversial $10 billion JEDI contract, which AWS contested after it was awarded to Microsoft amid allegations of political interference.