Events
Mar 31, 11 PM - Apr 2, 11 PM
The ultimate Microsoft Fabric, Power BI, SQL, and AI community-led event. March 31 to April 2, 2025.
Register todayThis browser is no longer supported.
Upgrade to Microsoft Edge to take advantage of the latest features, security updates, and technical support.
Azure Storage automatically encrypts all data in a storage account at the service level using 256-bit AES with GCM mode encryption, one of the strongest block ciphers available, and is FIPS 140-2 compliant. Customers who require higher levels of assurance that their data is secure can also enable 256-bit AES with CBC encryption at the Azure Storage infrastructure level for double encryption. Double encryption of Azure Storage data protects against a scenario where one of the encryption algorithms or keys might be compromised. In this scenario, the additional layer of encryption continues to protect your data.
Infrastructure encryption can be enabled for the entire storage account, or for an encryption scope within an account. When infrastructure encryption is enabled for a storage account or an encryption scope, data is encrypted twice — once at the service level and once at the infrastructure level — with two different encryption algorithms and two different keys.
Service-level encryption supports the use of either Microsoft-managed keys or customer-managed keys with Azure Key Vault or Key Vault Managed Hardware Security Model (HSM). Infrastructure-level encryption relies on Microsoft-managed keys and always uses a separate key. For more information about key management with Azure Storage encryption, see About encryption key management.
To doubly encrypt your data, you must first create a storage account or an encryption scope that is configured for infrastructure encryption. This article describes how to enable infrastructure encryption.
Important
Infrastructure encryption is recommended for scenarios where doubly encrypting data is necessary for compliance requirements. For most other scenarios, Azure Storage encryption provides a sufficiently powerful encryption algorithm, and there is unlikely to be a benefit to using infrastructure encryption.
To enable infrastructure encryption for a storage account, you must configure a storage account to use infrastructure encryption at the time that you create the account. Infrastructure encryption cannot be enabled or disabled after the account has been created. The storage account must be of type general-purpose v2, premium block blob, premium page blob, or premium file shares.
To use the Azure portal to create a storage account with infrastructure encryption enabled, follow these steps:
In the Azure portal, navigate to the Storage accounts page.
Choose the Add button to add a new general-purpose v2, premium block blob, premium page blob, or premium file share account.
On the Encryption tab, locate Enable infrastructure encryption, and select Enabled.
Select Review + create to finish creating the storage account.
To verify that infrastructure encryption is enabled for a storage account with the Azure portal, follow these steps:
Navigate to your storage account in the Azure portal.
Under Security + networking, choose Encryption.
Azure Policy provides a built-in policy to require that infrastructure encryption be enabled for a storage account. For more information, see the Storage section in Azure Policy built-in policy definitions.
If infrastructure encryption is enabled for an account, then any encryption scope created on that account automatically uses infrastructure encryption. If infrastructure encryption is not enabled at the account level, then you have the option to enable it for an encryption scope at the time that you create the scope. The infrastructure encryption setting for an encryption scope cannot be changed after the scope is created. For more information, see Create an encryption scope.
Events
Mar 31, 11 PM - Apr 2, 11 PM
The ultimate Microsoft Fabric, Power BI, SQL, and AI community-led event. March 31 to April 2, 2025.
Register today