Data Centers in Santiago
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Santiago – The Southern Cone’s Digital Anchor
Santiago is the vital interconnection point for serving the Chilean, Peruvian, and Argentine markets with minimal latency. It serves as the strategic core of digital infrastructure in South America, providing the density needed to drive regional revenue growth through secure and high-speed deployments.
Santiago: At A Glance
| Factor | Rating / Data | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Global Connectivity Grade | A | High subsea landing and peering density. |
| Direct Cloud On-Ramps | Over 4 – as of January 2026 | Includes AWS, Google Cloud (GCP), Microsoft Azure, and Oracle Cloud. |
| Power Cost | $0.14 – $0.18/kWh – as of January 2026 | Industrial rates supported by a 70% renewable energy mix. |
| Disaster Risk | Low (3.2/10) – as of January 2026 | Geological factors are the primary concern for this metro. |
| Tax Incentives | No | Standard tax structures apply to all facility operators. |
| Sales Tax | 19% VAT – as of January 2026 | Standard tax for colocation and network services. |
Network & Connectivity Ecosystem
Santiago acts as the primary digital gateway for the Andean region, offering a mature interconnection environment for global enterprises.
Carrier Density & Carrier Neutrality: The ecosystem features a carrier count of over 24 as of January 2026. This environment supports approximately 25–30 active carriers, providing diverse routing options and competitive pricing for transit and transport requirements.
Direct Cloud On-Ramps: Over 4, enabling access to 4 cloud regions as of January 2026. Local on-ramps for AWS, Google Cloud (GCP), Microsoft Azure, and Oracle Cloud allow organizations to establish private connections that reduce egress costs and latency compared to backhauling traffic to North American hubs.
Internet Exchange Points (IXPs): PIT Chile serves as the primary exchange point, facilitating efficient local traffic exchange and reducing reliance on international links as of January 2026.
Bare Metal: High-performance compute requirements are supported by global entities such as Latitude.sh as of January 2026. These providers offer automated server deployments for workloads that require physical hardware without the overhead of traditional colocation.
Power Analysis
Energy stability and a shift toward sustainable production make Santiago an attractive destination for large-scale digital deployments.
Average Cost Of Power: Industrial electricity rates range from $0.14 to $0.18/kWh as of January 2026. This pricing enables predictable operational budgeting for large-scale deployments, especially when compared to more volatile neighboring markets.
Power Grid Reliability: The Santiago metropolitan grid is well-engineered and benefits from a diverse energy mix, with renewables accounting for approximately 70% of production as of January 2026. Major data center corridors in Quilicura and Huechuraba typically feature multi-substation support to ensure uptime for mission-critical operations.
Market Access, Business & Tax Climate
The business climate in Santiago is characterized by stability and its role as a centralized hub for regional trade.
Proximity To Key Business Districts: Data center clusters are centrally located near the Las Condes and Providencia financial districts and the industrial zone of Quilicura. This provides immediate access to leading banking, retail, and telecommunications sectors as of January 2026.
Regional Market Reach: Santiago serves as an advanced digital gateway for the entire Andean region. It is the primary location for reaching users in Chile, Peru, and Argentina with a stable business environment as of January 2026.
Tax Advantage For Data Centers: There are no specific tax incentives for data center operators in this market. Businesses should account for the standard 19% VAT on all colocation and connectivity services as of January 2026.
Natural Disaster Risk
Santiago has an overall risk profile of Low (3.2/10) as of January 2026. While the metro area is in a seismically active region, building standards are strictly engineered for high resilience.
- Earthquake: 9.6 (High) – as of January 2026.
- Tsunami: 8.6 (High) – Indirect regional risk to coastal landing stations as of January 2026.
- River Flood: 5.5 (Moderate) – as of January 2026.
- Coastal Flood: 2.7 (Low) – Indirect regional risk as of January 2026.
Other natural hazards are considered minor or are not listed as significant threats to the metro area as of January 2026.
Explore Data Centers in Santiago
- Actis Santiago 1
- Actis Santiago 2
- Adexus Clink Extension
- Adexus Santiago
- Bynarya Las Condes
- Cirion Huechuraba
- Claro Claro Ciudad Empresarial
- Claro El Salto
- Claro Liray
- CMET SACI La Florida
- Digital Realty CHL01
- Digital Realty CHL02
- Digital Realty CHL03
- EdgeConneX EDCSCL01
- EDGEUNO Santiago
- EDGEUNO Santiago Chile
- Entel CNT
- Entel Santiago
- Equinix ST1
- Equinix ST2
- Equinix ST3
- Grupo ZGH SpA La Florida
- GrupoCG Bruc Networks
- GTD Internet Santiago
- Gtd Intesis Providencia
- Ingeniería e Informática Asociada Porvenir
- Internexa Providencia
- MCL Internet DCM1
- Mediaflog Santiago
- Nabiax Apoquindo
- Nabiax Paine
- Nabiax San Martin
- Optic Telecom Chile Recoleta
- PIT CHILE SPA Santiago
- POWER HOST DATACENTER Santiago
- SCL-IX Recoleta 1
- SCL-IX Recoleta 2
- SCL-IX Recoleta 3
- Servicios Informáticos Hostname Limitada Ñuñoa
- SONDA Quilicura
- SONDA Teatinos
- TNS CHILE-TECHNETSECURITY Santiago
- Xconnect Las Condes