Market Intelligence

Who operates data centres where in Malaysia.

A curated directory of the operators and facilities behind Malaysia’s data-centre boom, from the Johor hyperscale surge to the Cyberjaya and Klang Valley cloud cluster. Every facility is sourced from public announcements and carries a citable link. This is the map the listing portals leave out.

Tracking 17 facilities across 15 operators.

Sources & methodology

This directory is compiled by hand from public, citable sources: operator press releases, MIDA and state announcements, hyperscaler statements, and reputable trade press. Each facility carries a primary source link. Capacity in megawatts is recorded only where a specific figure is publicly stated; where capacity is not disclosed we say so rather than estimate it. No record is copied from any commercial data-centre database. Status reflects the latest public information and changes quickly in an active build-out, so figures are guidance, not a substitute for operator confirmation.

Operator press releases (PDG, AirTrunk, Yondr, Vantage, Bridge, K2, DayOne, NTT, AIMS, TM, EdgeConneX)MIDA (Malaysian Investment Development Authority) media releasesHyperscaler announcements (Microsoft, AWS, Google Cloud, Oracle)DataCenterDynamics (DCD)The Edge Malaysia / New Straits Times / Digital News Asiaw.media / Data Centre Magazine

Johor

Johor: 10 facilities

Johor is the centre of Malaysia’s hyperscale surge, with Sedenak Tech Park, Kulai and the Iskandar Puteri / Nusajaya corridor drawing the largest campuses, anchored by abundant power and proximity to Singapore.

Selangor

Selangor: 6 facilities

The Klang Valley and Cyberjaya form Malaysia’s established data-centre and cloud cluster, home to the major hyperscaler cloud regions and carrier-neutral colocation.

Kuala Lumpur

Kuala Lumpur: 1 facility

Kuala Lumpur’s city-centre facilities are the country’s densest interconnection points, valued for carrier neutrality and network reach rather than raw hyperscale capacity.