The global server market reached a record $125.3 billion in revenue during the fourth quarter of 2025, driven by accelerating investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure, according to market analysts at the International Data Corporation (IDC).

The report showed that AI-driven infrastructure spending continues to outpace geopolitical tensions, sustaining strong momentum across the sector.

The market has demonstrated remarkable resilience despite economic challenges, with leading companies maintaining significant investment levels.

This has been particularly evident among hyperscalers and large service providers competing for leadership in the AI era.

During the quarter, the market recorded high double-digit growth of 52.4 per cent year-on-year, compared with the same period in 2024.

Revenue from x86 servers rose by 16.9 per cent to $69.8 billion, reflecting steady demand in traditional architectures.

At the same time, non-x86 servers surged by 146.4 per cent year-on-year to $55.5 billion, highlighting a shift towards alternative computing platforms.

Servers equipped with embedded GPUs saw revenue increase by 59.1 per cent year-on-year, accounting for more than half of total server market revenue.

For the full year 2025, the market expanded by 80.4 per cent compared with 2024, reaching a record $444.1 billion in annual revenue.

The report noted that hyperscalers and cloud service providers remain the primary drivers of demand, while traditional on-premise segments continue to adopt a more cautious approach to spending.

Despite relatively low concerns about recession, the outlook is shaped by slow global economic growth and ongoing geopolitical tensions.

Rising and volatile prices for key components such as GPUs, DRAM and SSDs are increasing pressure on the market, raising concerns about future cost dynamics.

Some companies have attempted to secure pricing in advance amid fears of further increases, while the industry adapts to tightening supply conditions.

The report warned that supply constraints could intensify in 2026, as demand continues to exceed available capacity.

“The race for AI adoption is settling the market pace with companies starving for infrastructure looking not only GPUs but also consuming more CPUs among other components in order to feed their needs, we are going to see more price pressures and that may impact on market dynamics with less units but higher average selling prices going forward,” said Juan Seminara, research director for worldwide enterprise infrastructure trackers.

Regionally, the United States recorded the fastest growth, with server market revenue increasing by 72.4 per cent compared with the fourth quarter of 2024.

This expansion was supported by an 80.1 per cent rise in the accelerated server segment, reflecting strong AI-related demand.

Canada followed with growth of 70.7 per cent, driven by similar factors.

Europe, the Middle East and Africa also posted robust double-digit growth of 43.6 per cent, while Asia Pacific excluding Japan and China recorded growth of 27.9 per cent.

China and Latin America saw more moderate but still solid increases of 17.7 per cent and 12.8 per cent respectively.

In contrast, Japan experienced a decline of 4.7 per cent, as it was unable to match a strong investment cycle recorded a year earlier.

In terms of vendor rankings, Dell Technologies led the OEM market with a 10.0 per cent revenue share, supported by strong growth in accelerated servers.

Supermicro secured second place with a 9.5 per cent share, achieving triple-digit growth in the same segment.

IEIT Systems and Lenovo were statistically tied for third place, with 4.1 per cent and 4.0 per cent market share respectively.

Hewlett Packard Enterprise completed the top five with a 3.1 per cent share.The findings underline a rapidly expanding and AI-driven server market, shaped by strong demand, pricing pressures and intensifying global competition.