Product overview

A trusted exchange for production AI inference

SpotNode connects AI teams to qualified global execution supply through one API, and helps GPU owners monetize idle capacity through a governed, secure onboarding path.

What SpotNode actually does

SpotNode is an execution exchange for AI inference

SpotNode is not a listing marketplace for GPUs. It is an execution exchange for AI inference. AI teams send production traffic through one endpoint. SpotNode routes requests to qualified supply based on economics, health, and policy. GPU owners connect spare capacity through a secure onboarding model and earn from live demand.

What makes it different

Infrastructure discovery is not the same as production inference

Qualified execution, not raw listings
One API, not fragmented endpoints
Continuous scoring, not self-reported performance
Built-in failover, not best effort

Product pillars

The exchange, qualification, routing, and commercial stack

Inference Exchange

One endpoint for AI teams, one exchange layer for qualified execution supply, and one market surface for live production traffic.

Supply Qualification

SpotNode evaluates, benchmarks, scores, and governs supply before it is exposed to buyer-facing traffic.

Routing & Failover

Traffic is routed across qualified supply based on economics, health, latency, and policy, with continuity paths when conditions change.

Commercial Layer

SpotNode turns underused capacity into standardized revenue lanes and gives AI teams access to execution liquidity beyond fixed provider rate cards.

Who it is for

Built for both sides of the inference market

AI Teams

  • AI apps
  • Inference-heavy products
  • Teams constrained by price, availability, or rate limits

GPU Owners

  • Spare GPU operators
  • Endpoint owners
  • Enterprise infra teams with underused capacity
  • Capacity owners with underused supply

Next step

Enter the exchange with the right side of the market

© SpotNode.ai Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved.

Global execution liquidity for production inference