
Voltage Park, a provider of scalable GPU-as-a-service (GPUaaS) solutions, has announced the acquisition of TensorDock, a fast-growing GPU cloud marketplace. The move is part of Voltage Park’s strategic effort to expand its AI infrastructure footprint and deliver more accessible and flexible computing power to developers, researchers, and enterprises in the artificial intelligence sector.
The acquisition aligns with Voltage Park’s mission to democratize access to high-performance AI infrastructure. By integrating TensorDock’s marketplace into its offerings, Voltage Park aims to deliver a broader and more cost-effective range of GPU solutions. The expanded platform will now cater to users ranging from individual developers to large-scale AI organizations requiring advanced training, inference, and model hosting capabilities.
“Our shared goal is to increase access to AI computing,” said Ozan Kaya, CEO of Voltage Park. “We saw in TensorDock the ideal partner to help us meet our long-term goal of providing high-performance GPU accelerators to power AI model development and deployment. With this acquisition, Voltage Park is solidifying its role as a leading alternative to traditional cloud hyperscalers.”
TensorDock is known for offering a wide selection of GPU instances, from single-slot NVIDIA RTX cards to advanced NVLink-connected NVIDIA HGX H100 SXM5 servers. The platform has been a market leader in providing affordable access to cutting-edge hardware, including on-demand Hopper RTX cards, real-time H100 instances at under $3 per hour, and early support for the latest NVIDIA RTX Blackwell GPUs. Through a network of international vendors – including Voltage Park – TensorDock has maintained competitive pricing without compromising security or reliability.
Following the acquisition, TensorDock will continue to operate its GPU marketplace platform, which will now benefit from additional infrastructure resources and integration with Voltage Park’s AI-optimized environment. Users will be able to scale seamlessly from entry-level GPUs like the A4000 RTX to full-scale NVIDIA SuperPod clusters, all under a unified interface.
As part of the integration, TensorDock founder Jonathan Lei will become General Manager of On-Demand at Voltage Park. Melissa Du, formerly Director of Customer Experience at Voltage Park, will step into the role of General Manager at TensorDock. Jaden Wang has also been appointed Lead Engineer for the platform.
“It’s clear that not all clouds are created equal,” said Jonathan Lei. “Voltage Park was consistently the top choice for our customers, offering unmatched reliability, powerful infrastructure, and features like InfiniBand with NVIDIA SHARP, advanced networking, and sharded NVMe-based storage. Bringing everything together under one roof will make the experience simpler and more powerful for our users.”
The acquisition positions Voltage Park to better serve the rapidly growing demand for GPU-accelerated AI workloads, offering both affordability and performance in an increasingly competitive cloud infrastructure landscape.