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The state of cloud-native security 2026: Maturity gaps and the automation mandate

Red Hat

Red Hat

Hybrid cloud security isn’t just getting harder – it’s reaching a breaking point. While security has always been a race without a finish line, Red Hat’s 2026 State of Cloud-Native Security Report reveals that many organizations are now trapped in a cycle of controlled chaos. To break free, teams must move beyond reactive firefighting and anchor their strategy in the foundational security practices and policies that turn security from a bottleneck into a baseline.

The reality of cloud-native incidents

The report establishes a sobering baseline: security incidents are now a near-universal experience. 97% of organizations reported at least 1 cloud-native security incident in the past year. These are not just sophisticated, one-off attacks; rather, they are often the result of “everyday lapses.”

The most frequently reported incident types include:

These incidents carry a tangible business cost that extends far beyond the IT department. 74% of organizations have delayed or slowed application deployments in the last 12 months due to security concerns. Beyond delays, 92% of respondents experienced significant impacts ranging from increased time spent on remediation (52%) and reduced developer productivity (43%) to the loss of customer trust (32%). In short, security is no longer just a technical checkbox—it is a primary risk to business agility.

Caption: The response when the surveyed organizations were asked, “To what extent do you expect each of the following to impact your organization’s cloud-native security strategy over the next 12 months? (reporting some or strong influence).

The maturity paradox: Confidence vs. strategy

One of the report’s most striking findings is the gap between perceived readiness and actual strategy. While 56% of organizations describe their day-to-day security posture as “highly proactive.” However, only 39% actually possess a mature, well-defined cloud-native security strategy.

This suggests that while teams aspire to be forward-looking, many are “improvising.” In fact, approximately 22% of organizations operate with no defined strategy at all. This lack of structure leads to inconsistent adoption of security guardrails, including:

The data underscores that maturity pays off: organizations with a well-defined strategy are far more likely to adopt advanced guardrails and report 61% confidence in securing their software supply chain, compared to much lower confidence among less mature peers.

Shifting investment trends: Automation and the supply chain

Recognizing these gaps, organizations are rebalancing their budgets for 2026. The focus is shifting from disparate point tools toward platform consolidation and building security directly into the software lifecycle.

Key investment priorities for the next 1–2 years include:

Compliance is no longer a back-burner issue. 64% of organizations expect the EU Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) to be a primary driver of their 2026 investment decisions. This shifts security governance from a “nice-to-have” to a mandatory, board-level requirement.

The emerging risk frontier: AI and cloud security

In 2026, AI has become a double-edged sword for cloud-native teams. While 58% of organizations say AI adoption is now a core driver of their security planning, actual governance is lagging “dangerously behind” the pace of implementation.

The report reveals a near-universal anxiety regarding generative AI (gen AI) in cloud environments, with 96% of respondents expressing significant concerns. These fears aren’t just theoretical; they are centered on three specific risks:

Without clear rules, organizations risk AI-powered behaviors altering configurations or leaking proprietary code outside of normal processes, essentially amplifying existing identity and supply chain risks.

Data-based recommendations for 2026

The report concludes with a clear directive: the speed of cloud-native innovation has officially outpaced traditional security. To bridge the maturity paradox, organizations must move beyond ad-hoc firefighting and adopt a structured, platform-centric approach.

5 Critical Actions for 2026

  1. Establish a formal strategy: Organizations must move beyond “ad-hoc firefighting” by creating a structured path from a reactive to a proactive posture.
  2. Embed guardrails and automation: Security must be a secure-by-default part of the platform, executed by DevOps or platform engineering teams to scale without adding friction for developers.
  3. Prioritize supply chain integrity: Implement mandatory image signing and dependency scanning. As one respondent noted, while everyone uses open source, “hardly anyone scans or signs their dependencies.” Being the exception is critical for resilience.
  4. Close the feedback loop: Unify observability and security data so that insights from runtime threat detection are fed back into the development process to prioritize the most critical fixes.
  5. Govern AI usage now: Organizations can’t wait for external regulations. They must convene cross-functional teams to develop guidelines on acceptable AI use and data handling immediately.

In 2026, security is no longer a bolted-on extra—it is a foundational component of cloud-native architecture. The organizations that succeed will be those that treat security as a primary driver of business agility, rather than a cost center.

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