Amazon AWS Adds Chainlink for Enterprise Blockchain Push
AWS Marketplace has integrated Chainlink’s data services, giving enterprises and developers a new path to connect traditional cloud infrastructure with blockchain-based applications.
Amazon Web Services is expanding its blockchain tooling by adding Chainlink’s data standards and oracle services to AWS Marketplace, a move aimed at helping institutions build tokenized asset products and hybrid onchain applications using familiar cloud infrastructure.
Announced on April 24, the integration allows AWS customers to access Chainlink services directly through the marketplace, potentially reducing friction for companies seeking to combine smart contracts with traditional computing, storage, databases, and APIs.
The partnership arrives as tokenization of real-world assets (RWAs) gains momentum across finance, with banks, asset managers, and fintech firms increasingly exploring blockchain rails for products tied to bonds, equities, real estate, and stablecoins.
Chainlink Services Now Available on AWS Marketplace
Three major Chainlink products are now listed for AWS users, each targeting a different challenge in blockchain-based finance.
Chainlink Data Feeds
Chainlink’s widely used Data Feeds deliver decentralized price and market information for functions such as:
- Asset valuation
- Trade settlement
- Risk management
- Collateral monitoring
The feeds aggregate pricing data from multiple sources through a network of independent node operators, helping reduce reliance on any single data provider.
Chainlink Data Streams
Data Streams are designed for lower-latency market data delivery, enabling onchain systems to react faster to changing prices.
According to the announcement, the product is intended for more advanced use cases such as:
- Perpetual futures markets
- Options protocols
- High-frequency trading environments
- Dynamic risk management systems
These types of applications have historically faced performance constraints when built fully onchain.
Chainlink Proof of Reserve
The third product, Proof of Reserve, focuses on transparency for tokenized assets and stablecoins.
It provides verifiable reserve attestations onchain, allowing issuers and decentralized finance protocols to confirm backing assets while automating certain safeguards, such as secure token minting or undercollateralization checks.
The model is also intended to improve auditability without forcing institutions to publicly disclose sensitive operational data.
Why AWS Is Working With Chainlink
Blockchain networks are powerful settlement systems, but they typically cannot access outside information on their own. This long-standing limitation is known as the oracle problem.
Smart contracts may execute automatically, but they still need trusted external data such as:
- Asset prices
- Ownership records
- Compliance inputs
- Reserve balances
- Identity credentials
That challenge becomes especially important in tokenization, where an onchain token depends on offchain facts to maintain value and legitimacy.
Chainlink has positioned itself as one of the leading providers solving that issue by connecting blockchains to external systems, enterprise software, APIs, and cloud platforms.
“AWS provides the foundational building blocks that financial institutions rely on, including compute, storage, and a comprehensive suite of cloud services,” said Simon Goldberg, AWS Web3 specialist solutions architect.
“Chainlink’s oracle infrastructure extends these capabilities by providing secure, bidirectional connectivity between AWS resources and smart contracts deployed on blockchain networks.”
Goldberg added that availability through AWS Marketplace lets developers continue using familiar AWS tools while building applications tied to tokenized assets and smart contracts.
Institutional Tokenization Push Accelerates
The AWS-Chainlink collaboration reflects broader institutional demand for blockchain infrastructure that integrates with existing enterprise systems rather than replacing them outright.
Many large financial players now view tokenization as a way to modernize issuance, settlement, collateral movement, and transferability of traditional assets. Instead of operating in isolated blockchain environments, firms increasingly want systems that combine:
- Traditional cloud services
- Existing compliance workflows
- Private databases
- Public or permissioned blockchains
That makes middleware providers such as Chainlink strategically important.
Competition in the Oracle Market Is Growing
While Chainlink remains one of the most recognized oracle networks, competition in blockchain data infrastructure is intensifying.
Earlier this week, prediction market platform Kalshi said it has integrated Pyth Network data services for its Commodities Hub, signaling continued demand for external pricing systems across crypto-native and traditional finance platforms.
At the same time, established market data firms including FTSE Russell, Deutsche Börse, S&P Global, and Coinbase have signed agreements to supply information to Chainlink’s DataLink platform, potentially supporting future tokenized financial products.
A Bridge Between Cloud and Blockchain
The AWS Marketplace listing is more than a routine product addition. It signals that major cloud providers are increasingly willing to support blockchain infrastructure inside mainstream enterprise channels.
For institutions exploring tokenization, the biggest hurdle is often not launching a token — it is connecting that token securely to real-world systems, verified data, and internal operations. By bringing Chainlink into AWS Marketplace, Amazon is helping lower that barrier and positioning cloud infrastructure as a core layer of the next generation of digital finance.


