CockroachDB joins IBM Cloud catalog to modernize enterprise distributed SQL
Most enterprise database conversations eventually hit the same wall. Engineers built legacy systems for stability inside contained environments. Nobody designed them for the continuous, distributed decision-making that modern AI-driven applications now demand. Cockroach Labs and IBM are addressing that gap directly.
CockroachDB now sits inside the IBM Cloud catalog and runs on IBM Power processor-based server systems. For enterprises already operating workloads on IBM Power infrastructure, this means they can adopt a distributed SQL database without dismantling what they already have. The path to modernization runs through existing investments rather than around them.
The timing reflects a genuine shift in what databases need to do. Traditional systems optimized for transactional stability inside monolithic architectures face increasing pressure from applications requiring global distribution, high concurrency, and strict data consistency simultaneously. AI workloads push these requirements further still. Agentic systems make continuous decisions, access data constantly, and cannot tolerate the architectural bottlenecks that older database designs never anticipated.
By combining CockroachDB’s distributed architecture with IBM Cloud and IBM Power Systems, organizations can modernize incrementally rather than all at once. Customers procure and deploy CockroachDB directly within IBM VPC and IBM Power Virtual Server environments.
Additionally, procurement runs through existing IBM Cloud agreements, including committed spend, which simplifies vendor management considerably for large enterprises with established buying structures.
Allen Terleto, VP of Global Partners and Ecosystem at Cockroach Labs, framed the shift plainly. For decades, enterprises tuned and adjusted monolithic databases to keep pace with web-scale demands. Agentic AI, however, represents a different kind of inflection point entirely. It calls for a fundamentally different approach to data infrastructure, not incremental fixes to what already exists.
Rohit Badlaney, GM of IBM Cloud Product, noted that the collaboration expands database options for IBM customers specifically, combining Power environment performance with the flexibility that modern data-intensive applications require.
For regulated industries and enterprises running mission-critical workloads, the appeal is straightforward. CockroachDB brings distributed SQL capabilities into an IBM-supported environment, with IBM-backed service-level agreements and consistent operations across hybrid deployments. Consequently, enterprises no longer need to choose between modernizing their data layer and maintaining the reliability standards their operations demand daily.

