- Japan tops Asia Pacific at US$19.2m per megawatt (MW), with Singapore close behind at US$17.9m
- Vietnam is gaining attention as an emerging digital infrastructure market, supported by competitive build costs and longer-term growth potential
- AI‑ready data centres reshape power, cooling and structural designs; driving up development costs
Asia Pacific’s (APAC) data centre sector is undergoing a significant structural shift in development costs as artificial intelligence (AI) accelerates and reshapes how facilities are designed, powered and built. According to Cushman & Wakefield’s latest Asia Pacific Data Centre Construction Cost Guide 2026, sourcing strategies, labour costs, and supply chain constraints are key factors contributing to widening cost differences between markets, recording a 2.4-times variation in build costs within the region.
Data centre construction costs across APAC now range from US$7.9 million to US$19.2 million per MW. Japan remains the region’s most expensive market at US$19.2 million per MW, followed by Singapore at US$17.9 million per MW, while Taiwan is the lowest at US$7.9 million per MW. These differences reinforce that development economics are no longer moving uniformly across the region, increasing the importance of precise market-level modelling, especially for large AI-optimised campuses.
“Across Asia Pacific, construction cost inflation diverges sharply, with some markets seeing increases above 15% while others remain below 5%,” said Andrew Green, Head of Data Centre Group, Asia Pacific. “A key reason for this split is that AI is reshaping the physical and technical requirements of data centres, particularly at the shell and core level. Higher power density, more complex cooling systems and stronger structural requirements are becoming standard in AI‑ready facilities, with very different cost implications depending on local power availability, labour capacity and delivery conditions.”
As AI adoption accelerates, its influence on core design standards is becoming more pronounced. Facilities are increasingly planned around higher density compute and advanced cooling approaches, setting a new baseline for next‑generation development. Pritesh Swamy, Head of Research and Advisory for the Data Centre Group in Asia Pacific, said, “AI is transforming data centre design far faster than traditional development cycles anticipated. Each new generation of high‑performance hardware demands more power, more cooling and greater structural resilience. These requirements are redefining what it means to build a future‑ready facility, and markets that can meet them effectively are pulling ahead while others face rising delivery and cost pressures.”
Structural Forces Shaping Costs Across APAC
In established hubs such as Tokyo, Singapore, Sydney, Taipei and Johor, competition for power‑accessible sites, grid capacity constraints and longer connection timelines are increasing development complexity and delivery risk. In addition, evolving structural, electrical and cooling systems are increasing complexities for future-ready builds.
Procurement conditions are also contributing to uneven cost outcomes. Price differences between Chinese and non‑Chinese suppliers are widening, while longer equipment lead times and the growing adoption of prefabricated and modular construction are adding variability to project budgets. At the same time, many legacy facilities are proving difficult to retrofit for high‑density AI workloads, steering owners toward alternative uses such as edge computing, warm storage and interconnection hubs.
“Developers across the region are navigating a more complex delivery environment. Power readiness, procurement decisions and site conditions have become central to project feasibility, particularly for AI-focused builds that require higher density infrastructure and faster deployment timelines,” said Sam Asher, Head of Development and Commercial Advisory, Project and Development Services, Asia Pacific.
Vietnam Emerges as a Cost-Competitive Growth Market
Vietnam is also emerging as a market to watch in Asia Pacific’s next wave of data centre development. Cushman & Wakefield’s guide places Vietnam among the region’s more cost-competitive markets, with construction costs ranging from US$5.7 million to US$8.7 million per MW, and a mid-range cost of US$7.2 million per MW, while annual construction cost inflation remains relatively moderate at 3.8%. The market is covered in the guide through Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, and is also beginning to show greater scale, with around 73MW of operational capacity and a further 137MW in pipeline until 2030. At the same time, power access is becoming a more important factor in project viability, with the guide indicating an approximate 2- to 3- year wait time for new 100MW power in Vietnam’s key clusters.
Commenting on Vietnam, Ms. Ngoc Le, Senior Director, Head of Strategic Consulting, Cushman & Wakefield Vietnam, said: “Vietnam is still at an early stage in its data centre journey, but that is precisely where its long-term potential lies. The market combines relatively competitive construction costs with rising demand from cloud adoption, AI applications and the broader digital economy. As occupiers and investors look beyond the region’s most constrained hubs, Vietnam is increasingly emerging as a market with room to scale, provided developers can navigate power readiness and site selection effectively.”
DATA CETRE CONSTRUCT ACTIVITY EXPECTED TO REMAIN CONCENTRATED IN TOP 5 MARKETS UNTIL 2030
Cushman & Wakefield’s Southeast Asia Outlook also identifies data centres as the largest property type by investment volume across the region, while describing Vietnam’s market as relatively nascent compared with regional peers and therefore offering long-term expansion potential.
Regional Construction Cost Index
(ranked by mid-range cost and based on a mid-specification build)
|
Market |
Low $ / MW |
Mid $ / MW |
High $ / MW |
YOY Change |
|
Japan |
13,000,000 |
16,000,000 |
19,200,000 |
20.9% |
|
Singapore |
12,000,000 |
14,400,000 |
17,900,000 |
22.7% |
|
South Korea |
8,500,000 |
10,600,000 |
13,200,000 |
11.5% |
|
Australia |
7,900,000 |
10,000,000 |
12,100,000 |
3.8% |
|
Hong Kong, China |
7,700,000 |
9,800,000 |
11,900,000 |
4.4% |
|
Malaysia |
6,900,000 |
9,600,000 |
12,000,000 |
9.3% |
|
New Zealand |
7,300,000 |
9,300,000 |
11,200,000 |
0.0% |
|
Thailand |
7,000,000 |
8,800,000 |
10,500,000 |
14.7% |
|
Indonesia |
6,600,000 |
8,300,000 |
11,200,000 |
5.0% |
|
Philippines |
6,600,000 |
8,200,000 |
10,300,000 |
17.7% |
|
India |
5,900,000 |
7,400,000 |
9,000,000 |
3.8% |
|
Vietnam |
5,700,000 |
7,200,000 |
8,700,000 |
3.8% |
|
Chinese Mainland |
5,600,000 |
7,100,000 |
8,600,000 |
0.4% |
|
Taiwan, China |
5,200,000 |
6,500,000 |
7,900,000 |
1.7% |
-END-