Site icon Converge Digest

DeepInfra Opens Toronto Data Center with 1,000+ Blackwell B300s 

DeepInfra Opens Toronto AI Data Center with 1,000+ NVIDIA Blackwell B300 GPUs

DeepInfra opened its first international data center location in Toronto, deploying more than 1,000 NVIDIA Blackwell B300 GPUs to expand capacity for large-scale AI inference workloads. The 1.7 MW facility marks the company’s ninth data center location and extends its infrastructure footprint beyond the United States as enterprises increase production deployments of generative AI and agentic applications.

The Toronto cluster follows DeepInfra’s $107 million Series B funding round announced in May 2026. The company said the investment will support global expansion of its purpose-built inference cloud, developer tooling, and next-generation model deployments. DeepInfra owns and operates its GPU infrastructure and processes nearly five trillion tokens per week across a platform supporting more than 200 open-source models through OpenAI-compatible APIs.

DeepInfra positions the Toronto deployment as part of a distributed infrastructure strategy designed to place GPU capacity closer to customers, users, and data. The company operates eight U.S. data center locations and said additional international deployments remain under evaluation. DeepInfra reported in May that its revenue had tripled since the beginning of 2026 and that nearly 30% of its weekly token volume came from agent-based systems.

• Facility capacity: 1.7 MW

• GPU deployment: More than 1,000 NVIDIA Blackwell B300 GPUs

• Infrastructure footprint: Nine data center locations, including eight in the United States and the new Toronto cluster

• International expansion: Toronto marks DeepInfra’s first data center location outside the United States

• Series B funding: $107 million announced in May 2026

• Investors: Round co-led by 500 Global and Georges Harik, with participation from A.Capital Ventures, Crescent Cove, Felicis, NVIDIA, Peak6, Samsung Next, Supermicro, and Upper90

• Platform scale: Nearly five trillion tokens processed per week

• Model portfolio: More than 200 open-source models supported through OpenAI-compatible APIs

• Infrastructure strategy: DeepInfra owns and operates its GPU infrastructure and optimizes its computing stack for high-throughput inference workloads

“Enterprises are moving from experimentation to production at unprecedented speed, and that shift demands infrastructure that is both scalable and globally distributed,” said Nikola Borisov, CEO and co-founder of DeepInfra. “This Toronto cluster is a foundational step in expanding our capacity beyond the U.S. and ensuring customers can run AI workloads closer to where their users and data reside.”

🌐 Analysis: DeepInfra’s Toronto deployment illustrates the continued specialization of AI infrastructure around inference as production workloads generate sustained demand for GPU capacity, low latency, and predictable token economics. The company’s expansion also places it within a growing field of inference-focused infrastructure providers and GPU cloud operators investing in owned or dedicated compute capacity rather than relying exclusively on general-purpose public cloud infrastructure.

Exit mobile version