OEM vendors post historic quarter, gaining share as ODM Direct concentration eases.
| $122.6B Total Revenue 1Q26 | +30.4% YoY Revenue Growth | $68.9B GPU Server Revenue | 47.9% Non-x86 Share of Market |
BOSTON, June 15, 2026 – The worldwide server market reached $122.6 billion in vendor revenue in the first quarter of 2026 — a 30.4% year-over-year increase — according to IDC’s Worldwide Quarterly Server Tracker. The result reflects AI-driven infrastructure investment that has moved from cyclical to durable, even as component supply constraints moderated sequential growth from the record pace set in the second half of 2025.
Two distinct dynamics are shaping the market. First, AI infrastructure investment from hyperscalers and large cloud providers is running at a scale that shows no sign of plateauing. Second, the non-accelerated segment faces a supply-constrained environment where demand remains robust but component availability — particularly DRAM and NAND flash — is limiting near-term shipment volumes. Leading vendors confirm order pipelines are strong. According to IDC, supply — not demand — is the primary ceiling on near-term server market growth.
- 30.4% year-over-year growth in vendor revenue in 1Q26, reaching $122.6 billion, compared to $94.1 billion in 1Q25.
- Non-x86 servers reached $58.7 billion, up 107.6% YoY, now representing 47.9% of total market revenue, closing in rapidly on x86’s share.
- x86 server revenue reached $63.9 billion, reflecting a modest -2.9% YoY decline as component supply constraints impacted shipment volumes.
- GPU accelerated servers generated $68.9 billion (+24.8% YoY), representing 56.2% of total market revenue. Other Accelerated servers surged 122.1% YoY to $17.7 billion.
- ODM Direct revenue share compressed from 64.1% in 1Q25 to 50.2% in 1Q26, as branded OEM vendors captured a growing share of AI infrastructure deployments.
- Top three fastest-growing regions: Canada (+190.9%), Middle East & Africa (+121.4%), and Western Europe (+80.6% YoY).
The 1Q26 results confirm that AI infrastructure investment is now a global and multi-sector phenomenon. Hyperscalers and large cloud service providers committed hundreds of billions in capital expenditure for 2026, sustaining demand for GPU-optimized server platforms at scale. AI infrastructure adoption is no longer limited to the largest public clouds. Sovereign AI initiatives, government-directed programs to build nationally controlled AI compute infrastructure, now span over 40 countries, creating a policy-driven demand layer largely insulated from commercial budget cycles.
The non-accelerated segment tells a more nuanced story. Revenue declined slightly YoY, but underlying demand signals remain positive. Enterprise customers are holding firm against elevated component prices — a meaningful shift from an era when infrastructure was viewed primarily as a cost to be managed. Top OEM vendors flagged supply constraints in DRAM, NAND, CPUs, and hard drives as the principal cap on near-term growth. IDC expects supply normalization to progress through 2027, with meaningful capacity relief as new fabrication capacity comes online.
“AI infrastructure demand is broadening beyond hyperscalers into enterprise and sovereign deployments across more than 40 countries, while the non-accelerated segment faces a supply-driven pause, not a demand-driven slowdown. Companies aren’t pulling back from infrastructure investment; they’re just not getting servers as fast as they need them. Longer term, emerging workloads, including agentic applications and physical AI ecosystems, will keep demand elevated well beyond the current cycle.” — Juan Seminara, Research Director, Worldwide Enterprise Infrastructure Trackers, IDC
Server Regional Market Results
The United States remained the dominant market, generating $79.6 billion (+24.1% YoY), representing 64.9% of global revenue. PRC reached $19.2 billion (+30.9% YoY), reflecting continued domestic AI investment. APeJC grew 45.2% to $9.7 billion, while Western Europe showed outstanding performance with 80.6% growth to $7.6 billion. Japan contracted 16.1% against a particularly strong 1Q25 base. Canada (+190.9%), Middle East & Africa (+121.4%), and Latin America (+64.1%) each demonstrated robust growth, underscoring the increasingly global distribution of AI-driven server demand.
Overall Server Market Standings, by Company
Dell Technologies delivered an exceptional quarter to claim the top position with a 16.5% revenue share and 244.1% YoY growth, driven by record AI server orders. Super Micro retained second place with 7.6% revenue share, growing 128.9% YoY. Lenovo moved to third position with 4.6% share and 36.5% growth, while IEIT Systems ranked fourth with 3.3% share. Hewlett Packard Enterprise rounded out the top five with 3.0% share and 17.2% growth. ODM Direct retained its dominant absolute position at $61.5 billion but saw its share compress from 64.1% to 50.2%.
Top 5 Companies — Worldwide Server Market, 1Q26 (Vendor Revenue in US$ millions)
| Company | 1Q26 Revenue | 1Q26 Share | 1Q25 Revenue | 1Q25 Share | YoY Growth |
| 1. Dell Technologies | $20,280.8M | 16.5% | $5,893.3M | 6.3% | +244.1% |
| 2. Super Micro | $9,331.0M | 7.6% | $4,075.8M | 4.3% | +128.9% |
| 3. Lenovo | $5,621.8M | 4.6% | $4,118.4M | 4.4% | +36.5% |
| 4. IEIT Systems | $4,012.0M | 3.3% | $4,313.7M | 4.6% | -7.0% |
| 5. Hewlett Packard Enterprise | $3,719.5M | 3.0% | $3,173.9M | 3.4% | +17.2% |
| ODM Direct | $61,537.9M | 50.2% | $60,278.9M | 64.1% | +2.1% |
| Rest of Market | $18,114.7M | 14.8% | $12,212.4M | 13.0% | +48.3% |
| Total | $122,617.8M | 100.0% | $94,066.4M | 100.0% | +30.4% |
Source: IDC Worldwide Quarterly Server Tracker, June 11, 2026.
Taxonomy Notes
IDC defines a server system as a multiuser computing device that accesses and delivers services via a network. The server and the applications that run on it are typically shared by multiple users. Unlike a client device, a server does not usually have a user interface intended for human-machine interaction.
Accelerator Type Definitions
Non-accelerated: Servers without an embedded accelerator. Servers where the accelerator is added by end users are considered non-accelerated in IDC’s Server Tracker, as are servers with an integrated graphics processor (IGP) fused to the motherboard.
GPU (Graphics processing units): A processor specialized for rendering images, animations, or video. In the context of server-based accelerated computing, a GPU is typically a programmable discrete graphics card and may also be used for general-purpose computing (GPGPU).
Other accelerated: Combines servers with a discrete embedded FPGA or ASIC. An FPGA is an integrated circuit designed to be configured by a customer after manufacture. An ASIC is a purpose-built circuit that cannot be reconfigured after manufacture.
About IDC
International Data Corporation (IDC) is the premier global provider of trusted technology intelligence, advisory services, and events. With more than 1,000 analysts worldwide, IDC offers global, regional, and local expertise on technology, IT benchmarking and sourcing, and industry opportunities and trends in over 100 countries. IDC’s analysis and insights help IT professionals, business executives, and the investment community to make fact-based technology decisions and to achieve their key business objectives. To learn more about IDC, please visit www.idc.com. Follow IDC on X at @IDC and LinkedIn.