2026 hyperscaler capex
Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Meta plan to spend over $600B on AI infrastructure in 2026, up ~36% from 2025. Most of it is physical data centers that have to be wired by hand.
Source: Dell'Oro Group, IEEE ComSoc, 2025
Hyperscalers are spending $600B+ in 2026 to build the AI grid. Electrical work is 45–70% of every data center built — and the country is short tens of thousands of qualified electricians. Rackline School trains career changers and recent grads to fill that gap.
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Every ChatGPT query, every AI image, every autonomous-driving model runs on a data center somewhere. Building and maintaining those data centers is now one of the most undersupplied trades in the US.
Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Meta plan to spend over $600B on AI infrastructure in 2026, up ~36% from 2025. Most of it is physical data centers that have to be wired by hand.
Source: Dell'Oro Group, IEEE ComSoc, 2025
The IEA projects US data center electricity demand will grow from 183 TWh (2024) to 426 TWh by 2030 — driven almost entirely by AI. Every new megawatt has to be designed, installed and serviced.
Source: International Energy Agency, 2025
The US is short more than 300,000 electricians for the AI data center build-out alone. 20,000 retire every year. 52% of contractors already report project delays from the shortage.
Source: Fortune, Uptime Institute, BLS, 2026
The median US electrician earns $62,350. Data center electricians clear $92,348 on average, with top earners in hot markets like Virginia, Texas and Arizona pulling $150k+. Many of our target students earn 25–30% more in their first data center role than in their previous job — without a four-year degree, without student debt.
Sources: US Bureau of Labor Statistics (May 2024); ZipRecruiter / Glassdoor data center electrician aggregates, 2025.
No four-year degree. No student debt. Skills that compound.
We're validating demand right now. Join the waitlist for the path that fits — you'll be first to enroll when it opens, with founding- member pricing.
The complete classroom side of becoming a data center electrician, 100% online and self-paced. Built to prep you for licensing exams and an apprentice-level interview.
We're targeting first cohort in late 2026. Waitlist gets early access + founding-member pricing.
Everything in the online course plus a paid apprenticeship placement with one of our data center contractor partners. Learn on real sites, earn from day one, get hired into the trade.
Partner network in progress. Priority for waitlist members when placements open.
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No. Rackline School is built for people coming in cold — career changers from any industry, recent high-school grads, or anyone tired of a dead-end job. You'll start from the absolute basics of electrical theory and work up to data-center-specific systems.
The online theory program is designed to take 4–6 months part-time. From there, the apprenticeship track is 2–4 years of paid on-site work to reach journeyman, the standard path for any licensed electrician in the US.
The licensure path is the same as for any electrician in the US (state-issued license after apprenticeship hours + an exam). Rackline School's specialization is what comes on top: the systems and standards specific to data centers, where the highest-paid work is.
We're still calibrating pricing. Joining the waitlist locks in founding-member pricing when enrollment opens — significantly below community college or trade-school equivalents.
AI is the reason this job is exploding. Every model needs power, cooling and physical infrastructure — and someone has to pull the conduit, terminate the switchgear and commission the UPS systems. That's not remote work, and it's not automatable.