Colocation Power Contracts: Fixed, Variable, and Pass-Through Models β€” Updated for 2026 (2)

July 8, 2026 Β· By Data Hall Insights Team

Colocation contracts reward careful reading precisely because the parts that matter most β€” renewal escalators, exit terms, and SLA remedies β€” are rarely in the paragraphs anyone skims first.

Ask ten infrastructure leaders how they choose a data center and you will get ten different answers. Yet beneath the variety, the same handful of questions tend to decide the outcome.

Where buyers get it wrong

Treating tier level as a proxy for reliability is a common shortcut that backfires. Design tier describes redundancy on paper; actual uptime depends on maintenance discipline, staffing, and how the facility has behaved under real incidents.

Underestimating growth is more common than overestimating it. Teams that lock in exactly what they need today frequently find themselves negotiating from a weaker position twelve months later, once the facility has less spare capacity to offer.

What good looks like in practice

Good facilities make the boring things boring: predictable billing, clear escalation paths, and remote-hands requests that get done on the timeline promised, not the timeline hoped for.

The best partnerships look less like a vendor relationship and more like a shared roadmap β€” regular capacity reviews, early visibility into expansion options, and a provider that flags risk before it becomes your problem.

A practical way to evaluate

Model the whole cost, not the monthly line. Setup fees, cross-connects, bandwidth, growth headroom, and exit terms all belong in the comparison. The cheapest rack rate is rarely the cheapest deployment.

Start with requirements, not providers. Pin down your power per rack, total committed capacity, connectivity needs, and the compliance regimes you answer to. That single page of clarity will shape every conversation that follows.

Why it matters now

What used to be a commodity is now a strategic asset class. When supply is tight, the question stops being simply how much it costs and becomes whether you can secure it at all, on terms that let you grow.

The market has split in two. Standard enterprise workloads still run comfortably at three to five kilowatts a rack, while accelerated-compute deployments are pushing twenty, fifty, even a hundred kilowatts. Those two worlds are priced and provisioned very differently, and conflating them is a common and expensive mistake.

A short checklist before you sign

  • Request recent incident reports, not just a summary uptime percentage
  • Ask what happens operationally when a single system fails, not just what the tier rating implies
  • Write down your power, space, and connectivity needs before you talk to anyone
  • Clarify remote-hands response times and what is included versus billed separately
  • Ask for real uptime history, not just the design tier

The bottom line

Markets like this reward those who prepare. Do the early thinking well, and the rest of the process tends to take care of itself.

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