Data Centers in Osaka
18 locations found
- N
NTT Kita-ku 3
3 Chome-1-59 Dōjima Osaka 530-0003 JPN, Osaka
- N
NTT Kita-ku 2
3 Chome-1-21 Dōjima Osaka 530-0003 JPN, Osaka
- DR
Digital Realty KIX10
8-1, 5 Chome, Yamabuki, Saito Osaka JPN, Osaka
- C
Colt Osaka
Unknown 1 Osaka JPN, Osaka
- N
NTT Osaka
3 Chome-1-2 Dojima Osaka JPN, Osaka
- N
NTT Kita-ku 1
3 Chome-1-7 Dōjima Osaka 530-0003 JPN, Osaka
- E
Equinix OS3
2-2-7 Shiromi Osaka 540-0001 JPN, Osaka
- T
KDDI Chūō-ku
2 Chome-2-72 Shiromi Osaka 540-0001 JPN, Osaka
- N
NTT 大阪市
1-26-1 Shinmachi Nishi-ku Osaka 550-0013 JPN, Osaka
- Z
Zenlayer OSA1
1-26-1 Shinmachi Nishi-ku Osaka 550-0013 JPN, Osaka
- Z
Zenlayer OSA2
1-26-1 Shinmachi Nishi-ku Osaka 550-0013 JPN, Osaka
- E
Equinix OS1
1-26-1 Shinmachi Nishi-ku Osaka 550-0013 JPN, Osaka
- KO
Optage Data Center Osaka
6F Keihanshin Kitahorie Building, 3-6-11, Kitahorie, Nishi-ku Osaka 550-0014 JPN, Osaka
- N
NTT OS4
1 Chome-3-10 Kawarayamachi Osaka 542-0066 JPN, Osaka
- DR
Digital Realty KIX12
6-2-1 Saitokita Minoh JPN, Minoh
- DR
Digital Realty KIX11
6 Chome-1 Saitoaokita Minoh 562-0029 JPN, Minoh
- DR
Digital Realty KIX13
6 Chome-1 Saitoaokita Minoh 562-0029 JPN, Minoh
- E
Equinix OS2X
4-chome-1-58 Saitoaokita Minoh 562-0029 JPN, Minoh
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Osaka – The Resilient Disaster Recovery Hub for Japan
Critical Redundancy for Western Japan
Osaka serves as the vital second pillar of the Japanese digital economy, providing the necessary geographic separation from Tokyo for enterprise-grade redundancy. It is the primary gateway for the industrial giants of the Kansai region, ensuring low-latency access to 20 million consumers and a sturdy alternative for high-stakes financial operations.
Osaka: At A Glance
| Factor | Rating / Data | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Global Connectivity Grade | A | Elite subsea and terrestrial fiber density as of January 2026. |
| Direct Cloud On-Ramps | Over 3 – as of January 2026 | Access to AWS, Google Cloud (GCP), Azure, IBM, and Oracle. |
| Power Cost | ¥26.00 – ¥31.00/kWh – as of January 2026 | Stable industrial rates for the Japanese market. |
| Disaster Risk | Low (2.1/10) – as of January 2026 | Very low composite risk despite specific natural hazards. |
| Tax Incentives | Yes | Subsidies support data center decentralization from Tokyo. |
| Sales Tax | 10% Consumption Tax – as of January 2026 | Standard national rate for Japan. |
Network & Connectivity Ecosystem
Osaka is a primary interconnection point for the Asia–Pacific region, offering carrier-neutral facilities and direct paths to major domestic markets.
Carrier Density & Carrier Neutrality: Carrier count: over 40. The ecosystem features a diverse range of 40–50 unique network providers as of January 2026. This density ensures competitive pricing and multiple redundant paths for critical traffic.
Direct Cloud On-Ramps: Over 3, enabling access to 7 cloud regions as of January 2026. Major providers with a local presence include AWS, Google Cloud (GCP), Microsoft Azure, IBM Cloud, and Oracle Cloud.
Internet Exchange Points (IXPs): JPIX and BBIX operate major peering nodes in Osaka, facilitating efficient local traffic exchange and reducing the need for backhaul to Tokyo as of January 2026.
Bare Metal: High-performance bare metal services are widely available through providers such as Hivelocity and Latitude.sh as of January 2026.
Power Analysis
Energy infrastructure in Osaka is purpose-built for the high-density requirements of modern colocation.
Average Cost Of Power: Industrial electricity rates typically range between ¥26.00/kWh and ¥31.00/kWh as of January 2026. This pricing remains stable and provides a predictable basis for long-term operational planning.
Power Grid Reliability: The local grid is well-engineered and resilient. Data center clusters benefit from redundant substation support and high-voltage feeds that meet international uptime standards as of January 2026.
Market Access, Business & Tax Climate
Osaka is the economic engine of the Kansai region, supporting massive manufacturing, electronics, and pharmaceutical sectors.
Proximity To Key Business Districts: Data centers are strategically located near Dojima and Chuo-ku. This proximity provides immediate access to the financial heart and major corporate headquarters of the city.
Regional Market Reach: This hub serves a regional population of over 20 million people, providing a vital bridge between domestic users and international subsea cable landings.
Tax Advantage For Data Centers: Government subsidy programs support data center decentralization outside Tokyo. This initiative significantly lowers the cost of infrastructure development while improving national disaster resilience.
Natural Disaster Risk
Osaka maintains a Low (2.1/10) overall risk rating as of January 2026. While the composite score is low, the region manages specific high-exposure natural hazards through world-class engineering and strict building codes.
Tsunami: High (10/10). Regional risk is addressed through extensive coastal defenses and elevated site requirements as of January 2026.
Earthquake: High (9.7/10). Exposure typical of the Japanese archipelago is managed via advanced seismic isolation and structural standards as of January 2026.
Coastal Flood: High (9.4/10). This regional risk is managed by advanced urban drainage systems and sea walls as of January 2026.
Tropical Cyclone: High (9.2/10). Seasonal storm risks are addressed through strictly enforced structural reinforcement as of January 2026.
River Flood: High (7.8/10). High-capacity floodways and river management systems protect critical infrastructure corridors as of January 2026.