Microsoft is reportedly preparing to host Elon Musk’s Grok AI model, marking a bold move that could reshape the cloud and AI ecosystem.
According to reports, the tech giant has been in active discussions with Musk’s AI company, xAI, in recent weeks to make Grok available via Microsoft Azure, specifically through the Azure AI Foundry platform.
Grok, an AI model developed by xAI, will be made accessible to developers and Microsoft’s internal teams through Azure AI Foundry—a cloud-based platform designed to support the hosting, deployment, and integration of AI models in applications. Developers will be able to use Grok for building intelligent apps and agents, aligning with Microsoft’s vision of becoming the backbone of the AI agent ecosystem.
This move is part of Microsoft’s broader effort to diversify its AI model offerings and reduce its dependency on OpenAI, its current primary AI partner. Over the past year, Microsoft has accelerated its adoption of models from alternative providers such as Meta, DeepSeek, and now potentially xAI.
Notably, Microsoft recently integrated DeepSeek’s affordable R1 model into Azure and GitHub within days of its popularity spike, demonstrating its readiness to move fast in the competitive AI space.
Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s CEO, has reportedly been driving this strategic direction, aiming to position Azure as the hosting platform of choice for all major and emerging AI models. Asha Sharma, Corporate VP of Microsoft’s AI platform, emphasized the vision to evolve Azure AI Foundry into the operating system on the backend of every single agent.
While the Grok integration could strengthen Microsoft’s AI platform, it may also stir internal controversy. Elon Musk’s involvement in the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) project, as well as his public legal feud with OpenAI, could create friction within Microsoft, especially with its long-standing investment and partnership with OpenAI.
Musk, a co-founder of OpenAI, exited the organization in 2018 and later sued OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman, accusing them of straying from the original mission of developing AI for humanity’s benefit. OpenAI has counter-sued, escalating a public rivalry that now entangles Microsoft, which finds itself caught between both entities.
It remains unclear whether Microsoft will secure an exclusive hosting agreement for Grok. Other cloud giants, including Amazon Web Services (AWS), could also enter the picture.
Reports suggest that Microsoft will only provide hosting capacity, while xAI will handle the training of future models internally, especially after walking away from a $10 billion server deal with Oracle.
The announcement of Grok’s integration into Azure could come as soon as Microsoft’s Build developer conference on May 19. With OpenAI’s GPT-5 reportedly delayed and Microsoft’s in-house AI efforts yet to yield major breakthroughs, bringing Grok into the fold may signal a turning point in Microsoft’s long-term AI roadmap.
As Microsoft increasingly opens its ecosystem to a diversity of models—from OpenAI to Meta, Anthropic, DeepSeek, and now xAI—it is positioning Azure as the central AI hub for developers and enterprises alike. The hosting of Grok could mark a pivotal moment in that journey.