TLDR
- Microsoft is considering suing OpenAI and Amazon over a reported $50 billion cloud deal
- The deal makes AWS the exclusive third-party cloud provider for OpenAI’s Frontier platform
- Microsoft says this may violate its own agreement, which gives Azure a central role
- Both sides are in talks to resolve the dispute before Frontier launches
- Microsoft has invested over $11 billion in OpenAI since 2019
Microsoft has invested billions into OpenAI and built much of its cloud strategy around the partnership. Now, a new deal between OpenAI and Amazon is putting that relationship under serious strain.
🚨JUST IN: MICROSOFT WEIGHS LEGAL ACTION OVER $50B AMAZON-OPENAI DEAL
Microsoft is considering legal steps against Amazon and OpenAI, according to @FT.
The dispute centers on a reported $50 billion agreement.
Microsoft believes the deal could breach its exclusive partnership.… pic.twitter.com/tv1nXtlEWI
— BSCN (@BSCNews) March 18, 2026
According to a report by the Financial Times, Microsoft is weighing legal action against both OpenAI and Amazon over a $50 billion agreement. The deal reportedly makes Amazon Web Services the exclusive third-party cloud provider for Frontier, OpenAI’s enterprise platform for building and running AI agents.
Microsoft has long held an agreement with OpenAI that requires the startup’s models to be accessed through Azure. The company believes the Amazon deal could break that agreement.
“We will sue them if they breach it,” a person familiar with Microsoft’s position told the Financial Times. “If Amazon and OpenAI want to take a bet on the creativity of their contractual lawyers, I would back us, not them.”
Microsoft was one of OpenAI’s earliest investors, putting in $1 billion in 2019. It followed that with a $10 billion investment in early 2023. The two companies have had a deep and exclusive working relationship since then.
Last September, Microsoft and OpenAI signed updated terms. Those terms were meant to allow OpenAI to form new partnerships while keeping Azure as a core platform. The update was what made deals with companies like Amazon, SoftBank, and Nvidia possible.
What the Amazon Deal Actually Does
The Amazon deal, signed last month, designates AWS as the exclusive third-party cloud provider for Frontier. Frontier is OpenAI’s platform aimed at enterprise customers who want to build and deploy AI agents.
That exclusivity is what concerns Microsoft. Its agreement gives Azure a central role in how OpenAI’s models are deployed and accessed. Executives at Microsoft believe running Frontier on AWS undermines that role.
The Financial Times reported that Microsoft executives believe the approach “was not feasible and would violate the spirit, if not the letter” of their agreement.
In a joint statement released last month, Microsoft and OpenAI both said Azure would remain the exclusive cloud provider for OpenAI’s core models. They also said Frontier would continue to be hosted on Azure.
Where Things Stand Now
Despite the tough language, no legal action has been filed as of this report. Both sides are said to be in talks to resolve the dispute before Frontier officially launches.
Microsoft has not confirmed or denied the FT report publicly. Amazon and OpenAI also did not respond to requests for comment from Reuters.
The core question remains unanswered: can OpenAI offer Frontier through AWS without violating its contract with Microsoft? That question may ultimately be decided in court.





