A Compute Savings Plan and changing instance family to a less expensive

0

Greetings,

Scenario: A t2.medium instance was covered by an instance savings plan that has just expired. The t2.medium instance is expected to be converted to a less expensive t3a.medium in two months. A compute savings plan seems to be appropriate, since it allows changing instance family during the term.

Rates: For compute savings plans, t2.medium rate is $0.0489/hour while t3a.medium costs $0.0437/hour. Assuming a 1 year term. Source.

Question: what should hourly rate commitment be for a savings plan for this scenario, optimally? Can I specify the lowest one? ($0.0437)

Thanks.

已提問 5 個月前檢視次數 184 次
2 個答案
2
已接受的答案

Compute Savings Plan (CSP) can cover EC2 instances, Lambdas and Fargate. Also, CSPs can be shared across accounts within an AWS Organization. Your question is about a single instance, so I will assume that you have no other compute resources (EC2, Lambda, Fargate) across your AWS Organization. If you know that you will be moving to a less expensive instance type/size, then you can commit to the lower rate. Whatever can be covered by the CSP will be covered and the rest will be charged at the on-demand rate. You should know, however, that if there are other compute resources that can give a better discount, the CSP will be applied there first [1].

[1] https://docs.aws.amazon.com/savingsplans/latest/userguide/sp-applying.html

profile pictureAWS
專家
已回答 5 個月前
profile picture
專家
已審閱 5 個月前
0

We took out a savings plan for our EC2 instances. It was no upfront fee and a 3 year commitment. We have a little less than 2 years left on the agreement. If we resell it on the marketplace how does that fee structure change. I assume:

  • Since we paid $0 upfront we would receive no proceeds from the sale.
  • Since the buy will be paying a reduced rate to AWS we would be responsible for the delta between our current rates and theirs. Am I correct?
已回答 3 個月前

您尚未登入。 登入 去張貼答案。

一個好的回答可以清楚地回答問題並提供建設性的意見回饋,同時有助於提問者的專業成長。

回答問題指南