What companies in Germany expect from secure and sovereign cloud solutions
The cloud is the foundation of modern digitization for companies. However, with the growing dependence on cloud services, there is also increasing concern in Germany about digital sovereignty and the security of sensitive data. The latest "Cloud Report 2025" from digital association Bitkom sheds light on these critical aspects and shows a clear preference among German businesses for more control and trust in the digital infrastructure.
Security is the top priority when choosing a cloud provider:
The study clearly shows that security is the top criterion for companies in Germany when selecting a cloud provider. Trust in IT security, data protection and compliance as well as performance and stability are the most important factors for almost all respondents (99% in each case). This was closely followed by the ability to encrypt data (96%). This underlines the fact that protection against attacks, data loss, data protection breaches and operational failures is of the utmost importance to the German economy.
The desire for a domestic cloud - and its conditions:
Parallel to the high importance of security, there is growing concern about excessive dependence on cloud services from abroad. More than three quarters (78%) of German companies see Germany as too dependent on US cloud providers. Accordingly, 82% of companies want large cloud providers, so-called hyperscalers, from Germany or Europe. For 97%, the provider's country of origin plays a role, and for 67% it is even a mandatory requirement. All (100 percent) would prefer a provider from Germany.
However, this preference is linked to clear conditions: Two thirds (65 percent) of companies would not accept disadvantages such as longer waiting times for new functions, missing features or higher costs for a purely German offering. Dr. Ralf Wintergerst, President of Bitkom, sums it up: "A German cloud must be just as good and just as affordable as the offerings of other providers. If it is not, it will remain a niche product."