Where Europe's strategic computing power actually lives: 13 quantum computers, plus the supercomputing and research centres behind them — across 11 countries. Germany, France, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands, Finland and more. Open-source data, updated as systems come online.
The quantum machines installed across the EU — EuroHPC systems, national and commercial.
EuroHPC quantum computer integrated with HPC; inaugurated Feb 2026.
EuroHPC analogue quantum computer; launched May 2026.
Neutral-atom quantum simulator under the HPCQS project.
EuroHPC quantum computer; inaugurated Oct 2025.
EuroHPC trapped-ion system; inaugurated June 2025.
Neutral-atom quantum simulator under HPCQS.
Finland's national superconducting quantum computer.
Commercial trapped-ion quantum computer.
First in-region commercial quantum annealer for European access.
First IBM quantum computer in Europe.
EuroHPC photonic quantum computer.
EuroHPC neutral-atom quantum simulator.
Procurement launched Sept 2025; Amsterdam Science Park.
The hubs developing Europe's quantum stack.
Bavarian full-stack quantum-computer initiative.
Unified QC-PaaS hosting multiple quantum platforms.
Wallenberg Centre for Quantum Technology.
World-leading quantum computing & networking institute.
Europe's high-performance computing backbone — and quantum hosts.
Europe's first exascale system.
Leading EU supercomputing & quantum host.
Italy's leading supercomputing consortium.
One of the world's greenest supercomputers.
Czech national supercomputing centre.
France's national high-performance computing agency.
Bavarian academic supercomputing & quantum host.
Deep-tech, microelectronics and dual-use research.
World-leading nanoelectronics & digital research hub.
Europe's largest applied-research organisation.
French atomic & alternative energies commission.