The News
Oracle AI Database@AWS Becomes Available In Spain
On June 22, 2026, Oracle and Amazon Web Services announced that Oracle AI Database@AWS is now available to customers in Spain. The service is offered in the AWS Europe Spain Region and lets customers run Oracle database services on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure inside AWS.
The launch includes Oracle Exadata Database Service, Oracle Autonomous AI Database, and Oracle Autonomous AI Lakehouse. In plain terms, customers can use Oracle database tools while staying inside the AWS environment they already use. That matters for large firms that rely on Oracle systems but also run major parts of their business on AWS.
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The Company Behind It
Oracle’s Role In Mission-Critical Databases
Oracle is a public technology company best known for database software, enterprise apps, and cloud services. Many large firms use Oracle databases to run key systems tied to finance, operations, customer records, supply chains, and other core work.
AWS is Amazon’s cloud business and one of the largest cloud platforms in the world. Many companies use AWS for storage, computing, apps, data tools, and cloud systems. The Oracle and AWS tie-up is important because many large firms use both vendors.
This kind of product shows how cloud competition is changing. In the past, large cloud firms often wanted customers to move fully into one cloud system. Now, some of the biggest customers want more choice. They want Oracle databases, AWS tools, and fewer hard moves between systems.
Why This Matters Financially
Why Both Companies Win
Database migrations are costly, risky, and slow. Oracle AI Database@AWS offers a way to modernize without rebuilding critical systems—a path that feels safer for cautious enterprises.
The logic cuts both ways. For Oracle, running its databases inside AWS gives customers less reason to abandon them during cloud moves, protecting a high-value franchise. For AWS, it keeps large accounts from drifting to rivals when they need Oracle support. Both outcomes point to the same payoff: enterprises spend heavily on databases, storage, and cloud, and the easier these systems run together, the more of that spend stays on both platforms.
Limits and Uncertainty
The Catch
Multicloud is still complex. The appeal of running Oracle inside AWS is real, but customers must still manage cost, security, support, and data movement on their own.
Adoption will also be slow. Large firms don't move core databases overnight—they test, plan, review risk, and migrate one workload at a time, so the business impact builds gradually. Still, the launch signals a practical shift in cloud strategy. The question is no longer simply which cloud is best, but whether a company's most important systems can run across the clouds it already uses.
Disclosure: This content is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice or recommendations. You should always conduct your own research or consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.


