European sovereign cloud infrastructure built to challenge US hyperscaler dominance
Evroc is a Swedish sovereign cloud infrastructure provider founded in 2022 with a mission to build a European hyperscale cloud that challenges AWS, Azure, and GCP. Backed by approximately €60M in seed funding from EQT and Norrsken, Evroc is designing its platform from the ground up for EU data sovereignty, GDPR compliance, and EU AI Act alignment. The company is still early-stage — most services are not yet publicly available — but represents one of the most ambitious European cloud sovereignty bets to date.
Headquarters
Stockholm, Sweden
Founded
2022
Pricing
EU Data Hosting
Yes
Employees
51-200
Contact Sales
Billing: custom
European organisations run more than 70% of their cloud workloads on infrastructure controlled by three American companies: Amazon, Microsoft, and Google. All three are subject to the US CLOUD Act, which empowers American authorities to demand access to data stored anywhere in the world. For European governments, banks, and healthcare providers, this creates an uncomfortable truth: their most sensitive data sits on infrastructure they do not legally control.
Evroc is a direct response to that problem. Founded in Stockholm in 2022, the company is building a European hyperscale cloud from scratch — no US parent company, no American legal jurisdiction, no CLOUD Act exposure. Backed by approximately €60M in seed funding from EQT and Norrsken, Evroc aims to deliver compute, storage, Kubernetes, managed databases, and AI infrastructure across EU data centres.
The ambition is enormous. The reality, as of early 2026, is far more modest. Evroc is still in its build-out phase. Most services are not yet publicly available. There is no self-service signup, no public pricing page, and limited documentation. This is not a production-ready platform today. It is a bet — a well-funded, strategically important bet — on Europe's ability to build sovereign cloud infrastructure that competes with the hyperscalers.
Any honest review must hold both truths simultaneously. The mission matters. The execution is unfinished.
Evroc's foundational design principle is EU sovereignty. Every layer of the stack — hardware procurement, network infrastructure, software platform, and operational control — is built within EU borders by an EU-headquartered company. There is no American subsidiary, no US-controlled encryption keys, and no legal pathway for non-EU authorities to compel data access. For regulated industries and public-sector organisations, this architectural purity is Evroc's primary value proposition.
Evroc's roadmap includes virtual machines, block storage, and object storage — the baseline services that any cloud platform needs to be viable. Details on instance types, performance tiers, and pricing remain under wraps. Without public benchmarks or customer testimonials, it is impossible to assess how Evroc's compute performance compares to established EU providers like Hetzner, OVHcloud, or Scaleway — let alone AWS or Azure.
Managed Kubernetes is on the roadmap, alongside managed databases and networking services. These are critical for modern application deployment. Getting managed Kubernetes right is notoriously difficult. Even well-established providers have spent years maturing their Kubernetes offerings. Evroc will need to demonstrate reliability and operational maturity before enterprises trust it with production workloads.
Evroc has positioned itself as an AI-ready sovereign cloud, designed to comply with the EU AI Act from day one. The planned AI infrastructure includes GPU compute for model training and inference. Given Europe's growing demand for sovereign AI infrastructure — driven by regulatory pressure and the desire to process sensitive data without US cloud exposure — this could become Evroc's most differentiated capability. But "planned" and "available" remain far apart.
Evroc operates exclusively through enterprise sales. There is no self-service console, no pay-as-you-go billing, and no free tier. Early access requires direct engagement with the sales team. This approach makes sense for a pre-revenue company targeting large enterprises and public-sector contracts, but it means individual developers, startups, and small teams cannot evaluate the platform independently.
Evroc has not published pricing. Enterprise customers negotiate custom contracts. Without transparent pricing, it is impossible to compare Evroc's cost structure against AWS, Azure, or established European providers.
This opacity is understandable for a company still building its platform. Custom enterprise pricing is standard in the sovereign cloud space. But it creates a problem for any organisation trying to build a business case. You cannot estimate total cost of ownership. You cannot benchmark against alternatives. You cannot run a proof-of-concept without sales engagement.
For context, established EU cloud providers offer transparent pricing: Hetzner cloud servers start at €4.51/month, Scaleway instances from €7.99/month, OVHcloud from €3.50/month. Evroc will need to justify a likely premium over these providers by demonstrating superior managed services, compliance guarantees, and enterprise support that existing EU providers lack.
This is where Evroc scores highest — by design, not by adaptation. The entire company exists to solve the EU data sovereignty problem. Evroc AB is a Swedish company. Data centres will operate in EU member states. No component of the infrastructure chain touches US jurisdiction.
GDPR compliance is baked into the architecture. EU AI Act alignment is a stated design goal. For public-sector procurement processes that require sovereign cloud infrastructure — and there are an increasing number of these across the EU — Evroc checks every box that US hyperscalers cannot.
The compliance advantage is genuine and structural. Unlike US cloud providers offering "EU sovereign" partitions (which still operate under US corporate control), Evroc has no jurisdictional conflict to resolve. Whether that compliance advantage is worth the trade-offs in maturity and feature breadth depends entirely on each organisation's risk calculus.
EU public-sector organisations with sovereign cloud procurement mandates. If your compliance requirements prohibit US-controlled infrastructure, Evroc is purpose-built for you — once services reach production readiness.
Regulated enterprises in finance, healthcare, and critical infrastructure where CLOUD Act exposure represents an unacceptable legal risk. The coming years will determine whether Evroc can deliver the managed services these sectors require.
Forward-looking CTOs evaluating sovereign cloud options for medium-term infrastructure strategy. Engaging with Evroc now positions organisations to migrate when services mature, rather than scrambling later.
AI teams needing EU-sovereign GPU infrastructure for training and inference under EU AI Act compliance requirements. This is a nascent but growing demand.
Evroc represents the most ambitious European sovereign cloud initiative to date. The mission is strategically vital: Europe needs cloud infrastructure it controls. The funding is serious. The compliance architecture is sound. But as of early 2026, Evroc is a promise more than a product. Most services remain in development. There is no public pricing, no self-service access, and no production track record to evaluate. Organisations should monitor Evroc closely and engage early if sovereign cloud is a strategic priority — but production migration decisions should wait until services reach general availability and demonstrate operational reliability.
Not yet. As of early 2026, most Evroc services are still in development. The company is building out its data centre network and platform capabilities. Organisations should not plan production migrations until services reach general availability with published SLAs.
OVHcloud and Hetzner offer production-ready EU-hosted cloud services today with transparent pricing. Evroc's ambition is broader — building a full hyperscale cloud comparable to AWS or Azure — but its services are not yet publicly available. Existing EU providers are the practical choice for current workloads.
The US CLOUD Act allows American authorities to compel US-headquartered companies to hand over data regardless of where it is stored. European organisations using AWS, Azure, or GCP face a legal conflict between US data demands and GDPR obligations. Evroc eliminates this conflict by operating entirely within EU jurisdiction.
Not currently. Evroc operates an enterprise-only engagement model with no self-service signup or public pricing. Small teams and individual developers should consider established EU providers like Hetzner, Scaleway, or OVHcloud for immediate cloud needs.
Evroc has raised approximately €60M in seed funding from EQT and Norrsken. This places it among the most well-funded European cloud startups, but building hyperscale infrastructure requires capital measured in billions. Additional funding rounds will be critical to achieving the company's long-term vision.
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