The global data center interconnect market was valued at approximately USD 15.60 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach USD 37.40 billion by 2032, growing at a CAGR of 13.3% from 2026 to 2032. Growth is being driven by AI infrastructure expansion, hyperscale cloud build-outs, and the shift from copper-based networking to high-capacity coherent optical interconnects for 400G, 800G, and emerging 1.6T speeds. Data center interconnect has evolved from a supporting network function into core digital infrastructure for cloud, AI, and distributed enterprise computing. The market is expanding because modern workloads need higher bandwidth, lower latency, and more reliable links between data centers than legacy systems can provide. As hyperscalers, colocation providers, and enterprises spread compute across multiple sites, DCI has become essential for disaster recovery, workload mobility, and AI cluster coordination.
Key Drivers, Opportunities, and Challenges
- Key
market drivers include AI workload scale-out, hyperscale and cloud
expansion, data sovereignty rules, and 5G backhaul demand. AI is the
fastest-growing driver because large training clusters require
terabit-scale throughput and sub-microsecond latency across distributed
GPUs. Regulatory pressure is also important, especially in Europe and
India, where localization and sovereignty requirements are forcing
dedicated interconnect architectures.
- Opportunities
are strongest in 400G/800G coherent optics, software-defined networking,
DCI-as-a-Service, and co-packaged optics. Vendors can also benefit from
rising demand for managed and consumption-based interconnect among
mid-sized enterprises that want performance without heavy capital
investment. Emerging markets in Asia Pacific and sovereign infrastructure
programs in the Middle East add further growth potential.
- The
main challenges are high upfront capital cost, supply chain concentration,
technical complexity, and multi-vendor interoperability issues. Coherent
DSP chips, modulators, and photodetectors remain exposed to supply risk
and geopolitical pressure. Many enterprise buyers also lack the optical
networking expertise needed to deploy and manage advanced DCI platforms
efficiently.
Market By Segment Insights
By Component, hardware remains the largest revenue contributor because
of ongoing DWDM deployments and upgrades to modern coherent systems. Software
is the fastest-growing component, supported by subscription-based
orchestration, telemetry, and traffic optimization platforms. Services are
growing too, but mainly as part of managed and outsourced deployment models.
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By Connectivity type, short-haul metro interconnect under 80
kilometers holds the largest share, while long-haul is the fastest-growing
segment. Long-haul demand is rising as hyperscalers and governments expand
beyond traditional urban clusters into secondary cities and cross-border
deployments. This is also increasing demand for higher-capacity optical systems
that can move more data over longer distances at lower cost per bit.
By Application, disaster recovery and business continuity still lead in
revenue, reflecting long-standing enterprise use cases. AI and machine learning
scale-out is the fastest-growing application and is likely to become the
biggest incremental growth engine through 2032. Data storage mobility, workload
migration, and content distribution are also gaining momentum as hybrid cloud
strategies deepen.
By deployment mode, on-premises and operator-owned
systems dominate current revenues, but DCI-as-a-Service is the fastest-growing
model. DCI-as-a-Service is particularly attractive to enterprises and regional
carriers that want bandwidth on demand without large infrastructure
investments. By end-user, communications service providers remain the largest
group, while internet content providers and carrier-neutral providers are
growing fastest.
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Regional Overview
- North
America is the largest regional market, led by the United States and
supported by a dense hyperscale and colocation ecosystem. The region was
valued at about USD 6.10 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach USD
13.95 billion by 2032. It remains the commercial benchmark for advanced
coherent optics, open standards, and early enterprise adoption.
- Asia
Pacific is the fastest-growing region and is expected to more than double
by 2032. China, India, Singapore, Japan, South Korea, and Southeast Asia
are all contributing to growth through cloud adoption, sovereign data
rules, and expanding data center capacity. India stands out as one of the
most attractive near-term opportunities because of its rapid digital
growth and policy support for domestic data infrastructure.
- Europe
is more mature, but regulatory pressure is supporting steady demand.
Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and the Nordics remain important
markets, especially where data sovereignty and industrial digitalization
are strong.
- The
Rest of World category is smaller but includes fast-growing pockets in the
Middle East, especially Saudi Arabia and the UAE, where sovereign AI and
cloud investment is accelerating.
Company and Competitor Insights
The competitive landscape includes established
optical networking vendors, diversified networking companies, and emerging
photonics startups. Leading names include Ciena, Nokia, Cisco, Huawei, Juniper,
Arista, Broadcom, Fujitsu, Lumentum, Coherent Corp., Marvell, Megaport, and
others. The market is increasingly shaped by vertical integration, where
vendors combine silicon, optics, and software orchestration into one stack.
Ciena and Nokia have become especially important at
the high end of the market, with Nokia’s Infinera acquisition strengthening its
position. Cisco is leveraging its routing and Acacia-based optical
capabilities, while Arista is extending its data center switching expertise
into DCI.
Huawei remains dominant in China and selected APAC
and African markets, but regulatory limits continue to restrict its presence in
Western markets.
New entrants such as Ayar Labs, Lightmatter, and
Celestial AI are working on co-packaged optics and photonic interconnects.
These firms could disrupt the pluggable transceiver model if commercialization
accelerates. Megaport is also building a strong position in software-defined,
consumption-based DCI services.
Recent Developments
- In
September 2025, Ciena Corporation announced a definitive agreement to
acquire Nubis Communications for USD 270 million in an all-cash
transaction. Nubis specializes in high-performance, ultra-compact optical
and electrical interconnects for AI workloads, extending Ciena's
addressable market into intra-data-center and intra-rack connectivity.
- In
February 2025, Nokia completed its acquisition of Infinera Corporation in
a deal valued at approximately USD 2.3 billion, creating a formidable
second player in the Western optical networking market with combined
coherent technology leadership and established hyperscale customer
relationships.
- In
June 2025, Nokia, in partnership with CSC and SURF, achieved a record 1.2
Tbps DWDM transmission over a single wavelength on a long-haul European
academic network designed to support the LUMI-AI supercomputer —
demonstrating the rapidly expanding bandwidth requirements of AI-scale
computing.
- In
May 2025, Broadcom unveiled its third-generation Co-Packaged Optics
technology supporting 200 Gbps per lane for AI-scale networks, signaling
the vendor's ambition to become a dominant supplier of next-generation
interconnect silicon for both inside and between data centers.
- In
June 2025, Nokia partnered with Converge ICT in the Philippines to deploy
its Data Center Fabric solution — an integrated hardware and software
platform — demonstrating the accelerating DCI demand in Southeast Asian
markets.
Future Outlook:
The future of the market will be defined by the move
toward faster, denser, and more software-driven optical interconnect. 400G and
800G will remain the dominant transition path in the near term, while 1.6T and
co-packaged optics will shape the next phase of architecture change.
Software-defined control, automation, and AI-driven telemetry will become more
important as network complexity rises.
AI infrastructure will remain the most important
structural growth engine through 2032. At the same time, data sovereignty,
disaster recovery, and hybrid cloud workload mobility will continue to support
broad-based demand. Vendors that can combine high-performance optics, simple
management, and strong interoperability will be best positioned to win as the
market becomes more segmented between premium hyperscale buyers and
cost-sensitive enterprise users.
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