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European sovereign cloud in 2026: realism, not ideology

22 May 20262 min read

Hetzner, OVH, Aruba and new EU players grow quietly. Between Cloud Act, GDPR and real pricing, the choice gets pragmatic.

The "sovereign cloud" narrative went through two phases: first political ideology, then pragmatic engineering. By mid-2026 the conversation shifted: no longer "AWS is evil", but "AWS for what, and which European provider for what".

Market state

The three US hyperscalers — AWS, Azure, Google Cloud — still hold 70%+ of the European market. But European providers grew: Hetzner added data centers, OVH consolidated managed services, Aruba invested in EU-wide zones, Stackit (Schwarz Group) and IONOS opened new regions.

The point: for 70% of Italian SME workloads, a European provider is technically on par. The remaining 30% are very specific (ML training at scale, advanced AWS managed services) where AWS/GCP stay irreplaceable.

When European makes sense

Sensitive data under strengthened GDPR

Healthcare, public sector, minors' data. US Cloud Act + Schrems II/III rulings make storing EU personal data on US-controlled infrastructure risky, even if physically in Europe. Hetzner or Aruba eliminate the whole risk category.

Predictable cost

Hetzner cloud: 50-70% cheaper than AWS for equivalent CPU/RAM. For a standard web app with DB, cache, queue, annual TCO changes by thousands of euros. Over 5 years the delta pays a salary.

Egress fees

OVH and Hetzner offer generous data transfer (terabytes included). AWS bills every outbound GB. For CMS, asset serving, streaming, the gap is huge.

When AWS/GCP remain the pick

  • ML/AI workloads at scale: no European provider matches Bedrock or Vertex AI maturity.
  • Advanced managed services: DynamoDB, BigQuery, Lambda with complex triggers. European equivalents exist but lag.
  • Global multi-region: if you serve US/APAC users, hyperscalers stay unbeatable.

What we learned across projects

Hybrid setups are the 2026 reality. Hetzner for the core (web app, Postgres, Redis, queue). AWS only where needed: S3 + CloudFront for global assets, Bedrock for AI features, SES for transactional email.

The full AWS lock-in many Italian SMEs had in 2022-2023 is winding down. Not for ideology: for cost, data control, predictability.

Verdict

Sovereign cloud in 2026 is not a flag. It's an engineering decision that, for most of our SME projects, pays in TCO and reduces regulatory risk. The best choice is rarely "all European" or "all AWS": it's "the right piece on the right provider".