HashiCorp and Microsoft Extend Multi-year Collaboration Agreement
HashiCorp is pleased to announce an extension of the multi-year collaboration agreement signed with Microsoft in 2017. The purpose of the initial agreement was to expand the capabilities of the Azure Terraform provider to include more resources and services for Azure users to leverage through Terraform. In the two years since that agreement was signed, Microsoft and HashiCorp have collaborated on a number of new enhancements for customers including:
- Terraform embedded into the Azure Cloud Shell CLI
- Terraform support for Azure Stack
- Extensive services and resource coverage for the Azure Terraform Provider
- Over 100 Terraform modules published on the Terraform Module Registry
In addition to the work done on the Terraform provider, Microsoft and HashiCorp announced a series of Vault, Consul, and Packer integrations. Details on these announcements can be seen in this blog by Brendan Burns. HashiCorp was also recently recognized for the achievements made in open-source contributions to Azure by being named the 2019 Partner of the Year for Open Source Infrastructure and Applications on Azure.
The extension of this collaboration agreement signifies a continued commitment by both companies to deliver a great experience while using HashiCorp tools on Azure. Customers can look forward to continued support from Microsoft and a robust Terraform provider built on co-engineering efforts.
We look forward to executing on additional growth and innovation with the Microsoft team.
Sign up for the latest HashiCorp news
More blog posts like this one

Build secure, AI-driven workflows with Terraform and Vault MCP servers
At AWS Summit New York, HashiCorp introduced new capabilities that bring Terraform, Vault, and Vault Radar into the age of AI agents — advancing secure, automated infrastructure through composable, agentic systems.

Terraform without writing code: How to build self-service with no-code modules
Terraform no-code modules are an advanced infrastructure as code best practice that helps everyone in the org use standard, approved modules, even if you don’t know Terraform.

Helvetia’s journey building an enterprise serverless product with Terraform
What started as a basic compliance challenge for one team at Helvetia Insurance evolved into a comprehensive enterprise solution for running self-managed installations like a cloud service, using Terraform to manage a serverless architecture.