- Oracle will offer the US government 75% off certain software packages
- It will also offer “Significant“ Cloud -Service -Rabatter
- The company has close ties with government
Oracle reportedly offers the US federal government a huge 75% discount on license -based software and further “significant” discounts on cloud services until November.
The news, reported by Wall Street JournalFollowing several weeks of discounts from tech giants trying to win large government bids, in response to cost-saving efforts that ran from the musk-founded department of government efficiency.
However, this marks the first agreement that offers a government -covering discount on sky infrastructure, including data storage, computing and networking, according to the report.
Oracle discounts to the US government
As part of the cost -saving initiative, the general service administration aims to use state purchasing power to negotiate better technological offers, remove silos and cut out middlemen to operate the biggest savings.
Salesforce has already offered the US government a staggering 90% discount on slack, while Google and Adobe also form part of a growing list of tech companies losing prices.
In addition to reducing costs, the US government is also undergoing a rather large transformation to modernize outdated IT systems.
With the US government, which is already working closely with Oracle, 75% software and additional sky discounts could secure a large part of the revenue for the Texas-based tech giant. It recently launched a new program to help smaller suppliers sell to the Ministry of Defense and is also an important partner for Openais Project Stargate aimed at expanding AI infrastructure across the United States.
Oracle CEO Safra Catz explained: “We remain steadfast in our commitment to the US government and are happy to work with GSA to help any department and agency modernize their technology and get the benefits of Oracle Cloud and AI.”
Federal Acquisition Service -Commissioner Josh Gruenbaum welcomed the discounts and added that transparency about technical acquisition could tackle “Waste, fraud and cost uptake.”



