Connectivity
Carrier-neutral datacenters in Malaysia
Which datacenters in Malaysia have the most carriers?
17 datacenter facilities in Malaysia show active or dense network connectivity in the viabandwidth directory, 9 of them dense. Each band is a verified summary of how many networks, exchanges, and carriers are present — derived from network data, not a self-reported map. Unlock the operator dossier for the exact carrier and ASN counts behind each facility.
Connectivity bands derived from PeeringDB and RIR registrations and independently verified. Last reviewed 2026-06-10.
17 facilities
AIMS Cyberjaya
AIMS Data Centre Sdn Bhd
Cyberjaya, Malaysia
NTT Cyberjaya Data Center (CBJ)
NTT DATA's Global Data Centers division
Cyberjaya, Malaysia
AIMS Kuala Lumpur
AIMS Data Centre Sdn Bhd
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
DANAWA DC, Kuching
Danawa Resources Sdn Bhd
Kuching, Malaysia
CJ1 CYBERJAYA
Mytelehaus
Cyberjaya, Malaysia
CSF CX1 / TelcoHub1 Kuala Lumpur
CSF Group
Cyberjaya, Malaysia
CX2 / MY01 Cyberjaya Malaysia
Bridge Data Centres
Cyberjaya, Malaysia
Equinix KL1 - Kuala Lumpur
Equinix, Inc.
Cyberjaya, Malaysia
IP ServerOne MYIX-CJ1
IP ServerOne Solutions Sdn Bhd
Cyberjaya, Malaysia
PLTPRO Data Centre
PLTPRO Data Centre Sdn Bhd
Cyberjaya, Malaysia
TM ONE KVDC, Cyberjaya
Telekom Malaysia Berhad (TM)
Cyberjaya, Malaysia
Equinix JH1 - Johor
Equinix, Inc.
Iskandar Puteri, Malaysia
TM ONE IPDC, Johore
Telekom Malaysia Berhad (TM)
Iskandar Puteri, Malaysia
Open DC JB1 - Menara MSC Cyberport
OPEN DC SDN BHD
Johor Bahru, Malaysia
Open DC JB2 - Menara Ansar
OPEN DC SDN BHD
Johor Bahru, Malaysia
irix Tier IV DC @ Santubong 1
IRIX
Kuching, Malaysia
Open DC PE1 - Suntech Penang Cybercity
OPEN DC SDN BHD
Penang, Malaysia
Frequently asked questions
- How many connected datacenters are in Malaysia?
- 17 facilities show an active or dense connectivity band, 9 of them dense.
- What is a connectivity band?
- A verified summary of network density. Dense means many networks, exchanges, and carriers; Active means multiple networks or an exchange on-net. The exact counts are part of the paid operator dossier.
- Why does carrier density matter?
- More carriers present means more route redundancy, more price competition, and lower latency to reach networks — the core reason network engineers shortlist one facility over another.