Today’s enterprises are navigating competing challenges: delivering AI-enabled digital experiences at the edge while also meeting growing demands for data sovereignty and regulatory compliance. Whether it’s a hospital needing local compute for patient care, or a government agency requiring full control over its infrastructure, the need for flexible, secure, and cloud scale solutions has never been greater.
That’s why we introduced Azure Local—Microsoft’s solution for running Azure services and workloads at distributed locations, all managed through Azure Arc. With Azure Local, customers can deploy cloud-native and traditional applications on their own infrastructure while maintaining centralized visibility and control through the Azure portal. This approach is resonating: Microsoft has been named a Leader in the Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Distributed Hybrid Infrastructure every year since its inception.
Azure Local is the foundation of Microsoft’s Sovereign Private Cloud, delivering Azure consistent services in customer controlled environments which meet strict data residency and compliance requirements. Read more about our recent Sovereign announcements here.
See the Sovereign Private Cloud come to life here:
Today, we’re so excited to tell you about the incredible new capabilities on Azure Local including support for external SAN storage, rack aware clustering, larger scale deployments, and more.
Operate and scale with the power of the cloud
Azure Local empowers organizations to operate and scale infrastructure with the power of the cloud, no matter where it’s deployed. From the Azure portal, customers can define and deploy infrastructure across distributed locations, apply one-click updates to entire clusters, and centrally monitor performance, health, and security. This cloud-based control plane ensures consistency and agility across environments—whether in datacenters, branch offices, or sovereign sites.
NEW: Local Identity with Azure Key Vault (Preview)
Azure Local now supports deployments without Active Directory using local identity with Azure Key Vault, currently in preview. This new option simplifies setup by removing the need for domain controllers, while still providing secure access and centralized secret management through Azure.
Ready for all your apps, VMs and containers alike
Azure Local is built to run all your applications—whether they’re virtual machines, containers, or Azure services. It offers full-featured, general-purpose VMs with cloud-consistent management, and includes Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) built-in for modern containerized workloads. Customers can also deploy some of Azure’s most popular PaaS services like Azure Virtual Desktop, SQL Managed Instance, and Azure IoT Operations directly on Azure Local. With support for GPU-enabled nodes and Arc VM extensions, Azure Local is ready for everything from legacy line-of-business apps to AI-powered workloads.
Migrate from VMware to Azure Local (Generally Available)
Azure Migrate from VMware to Azure Local is now generally available, enabling customers to seamlessly move VMware virtual machines into their Azure Local infrastructure. This agentless migration path keeps data flows local, minimizes downtime, and simplifies onboarding with a cloud-consistent experience. Customers can discover, replicate, and migrate workloads using the Azure portal, with support for validated hardware and reference architectures. Azure Migrate unlocks a fast path to modernization for organizations consolidating legacy infrastructure.
Customer Spotlight: How Publix Employees Federal Credit Union strengthened its disaster recovery strategy with Azure Loc...
NEW: Microsoft 365 Local to meet your Private Sovereign Cloud needs (Generally Available)
Microsoft 365 Local brings trusted productivity services like Exchange Server, SharePoint Server, and Skype for Business Server into customer-controlled environments, running directly on Azure Local infrastructure. Designed for those who need productivity tools in a private cloud environment, it leverages Azure Arc to provide a unified control plane for easy infrastructure management, simplified deployment, and streamlined updates. The solution features a validated reference architecture with certified hardware to ensure optimal performance and reliability, along with a hardened security baseline and robust controls to safeguard your infrastructure. It’s a key part of Microsoft’s Sovereign Private Cloud strategy, now generally available.
Flexibility to meet your requirements
Azure Local gives customers the flexibility to deploy infrastructure that fits their exact needs—whether that’s choosing from over 100 validated hardware platforms in the Azure Local catalog or operating in fully connected or disconnected environments. You can run Azure Local in public Azure regions or in Azure Government cloud, supporting both commercial and regulated workloads. Azure Local adapts to everything from retail edge sites to sovereign datacenters, disconnected oil rigs to connected manufacturing plants, all while maintaining a consistent Azure management experience.
NEW: SAN Support (Preview)
Azure Local now delivers greater infrastructure flexibility with expanded support for leading external SAN storage solutions, a capability that customers have long sought. Customers can now integrate their existing Fiber Channel-based SAN storage from leading vendors such as Pure Storage, NetApp, Dell, Lenovo, HPE, and Hitachi directly with Azure Local clusters. External storage support allows organizations to achieve high performance, scalability, and resilience while continuing to use their trusted storage infrastructure. It also enables consistent management across virtual machines, AKS clusters, and Arc-enabled services through the familiar Azure experience. Customers now have the freedom to modernize their environments while maximizing the value of their existing investments. Our customers are already exploring the impact this brings to enterprise customers. “We’re excited to partner with Microsoft and their trusted storage vendors to test external storage support for Azure Local,” said David McKenney, VP of Public Cloud Products at TierPoint. “This milestone gives customers greater flexibility to address performance, scalability, resilience, and investment protection needs. It reflects Microsoft’s ongoing dedication to making Azure Local the leading distributed cloud solution by listening to the needs of their customers and partners.”
Support for more Storage protocols and other storage capabilities coming soon.
Reach out to Microsoft or our storage partners to be part of this limited preview.
NEW: Rack Aware Clusters (Preview)
Rack aware clustering is now available in preview for Azure Local, enabling intelligent placement and resiliency across multi-rack deployments using one storage pool. This feature allows Azure Local to detect physical rack boundaries and distribute workloads accordingly, improving fault tolerance and minimizing impact from localized hardware failures. It’s especially valuable for larger deployments where high availability and service continuity are critical. Rack awareness integrates seamlessly with Azure Local’s update orchestration and VM placement logic, helping ensure infrastructure stays resilient at scale.
NEW: Support for NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs (Generally Available)
Azure Local now supports the NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPU, generally available for high-performance workloads including AI inferencing, simulation, and visualization. This enterprise-grade GPU delivers exceptional compute density and energy efficiency, making it ideal for deployments that require advanced acceleration. Customers can deploy this powerful GPU in new Azure Local solutions—including Dell AX-770, Lenovo ThinkAgile MX650a V4, and HPE ProLiant DL380 Gen 12.
NEW: Azure Local for larger deployments (Preview)
Azure Local now scales further, with instances of up to 10,000+ cores across 100+ nodes delivered as multiple integrated racks with disaggregated storage. This enables customers to run the same familiar Azure Arc-enabled infrastructure and services at significantly larger scale, supporting a greater variety of workloads and scenarios. This new capability is available now in preview. Contact your Azure account representatives to learn more.
Secure by default
Azure Local is built with security at its core, offering a hardened infrastructure stack aligned with Microsoft’s secure-by-default principles, built-in Microsoft Defender for Cloud integration, and trusted launch VMs. Every VM is Azure Arc-enabled, allowing customers to apply security baselines, monitor threats, and enforce policies using familiar Azure tools. These protections are automatically enabled, so customers can operate confidently from day one.
Network segmentation (Generally Available)
To protect and isolate your network traffic between VMs or logical networks, Azure Local now supports network security groups (NSGs), generally available as of the 2510 release. NSGs enable precise filtering of network traffic using policy-driven access controls by applying inbound and outbound allow/deny rules. Rules support the full five-tuple of source IP, source port, destination IP, destination port, and protocol, and are enforced within the virtual switch at the virtual port level. NSGs can be applied to both logical networks and individual network interfaces and can be managed using the Azure Portal for centralized policy management of your edge workloads.
Get Started Today
For new production deployments
Azure Local is generally available for production use. Explore the solutions catalog to find hardware from your preferred vendor and read the deployment overview to get started today.
For evaluation (virtual)
Want to try out Azure Local but don’t have hardware? Get a dedicated Azure Local sandbox in one click with Azure Arc Jumpstart. All you need is an Azure subscription to get started.
Thank you!
As we mark the second year since announcing Azure Local, we want to extend a heartfelt thank you to our customers, partners, and community. It’s incredibly rewarding to see Azure Local continue to be the infrastructure of choice for enterprises seeking flexibility, security, and innovation at the edge. We’re excited to continue delivering the solutions you need to thrive in a rapidly evolving world. Thank you for trusting Azure Local to power your most important workloads—here’s to another year of partnership and progress!
If you’re at Ignite this week, please come say hello at:
- Our session dedicated to Azure Local What’s new in Azure Local
- Our booth “Azure Arc and Azure Local” in the Cloud and AI Platforms neighborhood
- See everything going on with Adaptive Cloud on our Ignite website Adaptive Cloud @Ignite 2025
FAQ
- What is Azure Local?
Azure Local is Microsoft’s full-stack infrastructure software that runs on validated hardware in your own facilities. It brings Azure capabilities to distributed or sovereign locations, so you can run virtual machines, containers, and select Azure services locally while maintaining a consistent management experience through Azure Arc.
- How are Azure Local and Private Sovereign Cloud related?
Azure Local is the foundation and core product fueling Microsoft’s Private Sovereign Cloud offering. It enables customers to meet strict data residency and regulatory requirements by hosting workloads on-premises, disconnected or semi-connected, while still benefiting from Azure innovation and security.
- When should I use Azure Local?
Use Azure Local when you need modern cloud capabilities in locations where connectivity is limited, data sovereignty is critical, or latency-sensitive applications must run close to where data is generated. It’s ideal for industries like manufacturing, retail, and government that require local control with Azure consistency.