Meta expanded its cloud agreement with CoreWeave to about $21 billion and extended the term through 2032. The companies tied the pact to dedicated capacity for Meta’s AI products and services. The new contract broadens an earlier partnership that carried a value of up to $14.2 billion.
CoreWeave said it will supply dedicated cloud capacity across several sites for Meta’s artificial intelligence work. The contract covers infrastructure that supports development and deployment over the next several years.

The companies linked the expanded deal to Meta’s push for more computing power. They also set a longer runway for capacity planning through 2032.
CoreWeave said the infrastructure will include early deployments of NVIDIA’s Vera Rubin platform. That platform marks NVIDIA’s next supercomputing architecture for AI workloads.
The companies said the system will target better efficiency, reliability, and scale. They also said the footprint will stretch across multiple locations.
CoreWeave tied the agreement to customer demand for high-performance computing resources. The company positioned its cloud platform around large, complex AI workloads.
Chief executive Michael Intrator said top companies continue choosing CoreWeave for demanding jobs. He said, “This is another example that leading companies are choosing CoreWeave’s AI cloud to run their most demanding workloads.”
The new contract adds to CoreWeave’s backlog of long-duration agreements. It also gives Meta reserved access to specialized compute capacity.
The agreement places inference at the center of the new capacity buildout. Companies now spend more on running models continuously after training.
CoreWeave and Meta framed the infrastructure around serving AI systems at scale. That approach supports products that answer requests and process tasks in real time.
The companies also tied the deployment to NVIDIA’s Vera Rubin systems. Those systems are expected to support larger AI workloads with improved performance.
The announcement described a shift from generative AI toward agentic AI systems. In that model, software handles more steps toward goals with less human prompting.
Meta continues to add computing resources for its AI roadmap. CoreWeave, meanwhile, keeps expanding its role as a cloud supplier for advanced chips.
The deal also shows how large technology groups are locking in compute for longer periods. Multi-year agreements can help secure access to scarce infrastructure.
CoreWeave shares rose 3% in pre-market trading on Thursday after the announcement. That move followed the company’s release of terms for the expanded Meta contract.
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