Red Hat Enterprise Linux on AWS Pricing
Overview
AWS customers can quickly deploy and scale compute resources, according to their business needs, with flexible purchase options for RHEL and RHEL with High availability:
Pay-as-you-go. Provision resources on-demand, as computing needs grow, without long-term commitments or upfront costs.
Savings Plans. Savings Plans is a flexible pricing model that can help you reduce your bill by up to 72% compared to On-Demand prices, in exchange for a one- or three-year hourly spend commitment.
Bring existing subscription. Customers with Red Hat Enterprise Linux Premium subscriptions can use Red Hat Cloud Access to move subscriptions to Amazon EC2.
RHEL Pricing Update
As announced by Red Hat on January 26, 2024, Red Hat is updating its Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) cloud pricing model to better align with the growing number of public cloud instance sizes and procurement models. As a result, AWS customers will see their Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) price change for RHEL-based EC2 instances effective July 1, 2024. The new pricing will apply to all RHEL on-demand and EC2 Spot instance usage, and to new RHEL EC2 Savings Plans or EC2 Reserved Instances purchased on or after July 1, 2024. Any RHEL EC2 Savings Plans (Compute or Instance Savings Plans) or EC2 Reserved Instances that were purchased prior to July 1, 2024 will continue to be billed on the old prices for the duration of the Savings Plan term.**
** Any new product (such as a new instance type, new instance size, new region, etc.) launched after July 1, 2024, will use the new RHEL pricing. Therefore, any new rates (such as new regions or new instance types) launched after July 1, 2024, will be on the new RHEL pricing, even if the Savings Plans were purchased prior to July 1, 2024.
How do I calculate the impact to my bill due to this change?
As mentioned by Red Hat in their announcement, the new RHEL pricing will scale by vCPU count. Therefore, the pricing will change based on the instance size (number of vCPUs) for all instance types. We have provided below tables that you can use to estimate the impact to your RHEL instance usage on EC2 for RHEL, RHEL HA, RHEL for SAP with HA and Update Services, and RHEL Workstation. The impact to RHEL SQL and RHEL HA SQL will be the same as RHEL and RHEL HA respectively. The table below shows the dollar per hour change in instance price, and can be used to estimate the impact to your RHEL-based On-demand, Compute Savings Plan, EC2 Instance Savings Plan, EC2 Reserved Instances, and EC2 Spot usage.
Example 1: You have 5000 hours of RHEL-based r5.xlarge instance usage per month. R5.xlarge is a 4-vCPU instance, and this means your per hour cost will go down by $0.0024, and your total cost will go down by $12 per month (5000x$0.0024).
Example 2: You have 5000 hours of RHEL-based r6a.8xlarge instance usage per month. R6a.8xlarge is a 32-vCPU instance, which means your per hour costs will go up by $0.2156, or $1078 per month (5000x$0.2156).
RHEL
RHEL
|
|
RHEL HA
|
|
RHEL for SAP with HA and Update Services
|
|
RHEL Workstation
|
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
vCPU size
|
Instance price change ($ per hour) |
vCPU size
|
vCPU size
|
|
Instance price change($ per hour) |
vCPU size
|
Instance price change($ per hour) |
1
|
-$0.0456
|
1
|
-$0.0631
|
1
|
-$0.0775
|
1
|
-$0.0293
|
2
|
-$0.0312
|
2
|
-$0.0312
|
2
|
-$0.0550
|
2
|
-$0.0205
|
4
|
-$0.0024
|
4
|
$0.0326
|
4
|
-$0.0100
|
4
|
-$0.0030
|
8
|
-$0.0148
|
8
|
$0.0902
|
8
|
-$0.0450
|
8
|
-$0.0050
|
12
|
-$0.0004
|
12
|
$0.1326
|
12
|
-$0.0300
|
12
|
$0.0150
|
16
|
$0.0428
|
16
|
$0.2318
|
16
|
$0.0350
|
16
|
$0.0450
|
24
|
$0.1292
|
24
|
$0.4302
|
24
|
$0.1650
|
24
|
$0.1050
|
32
|
$0.2156
|
32
|
$0.6286
|
32
|
$0.2950
|
32
|
$0.1650
|
36
|
$0.2588
|
36
|
$0.7278
|
36
|
$0.3138
|
36
|
$0.1950
|
40
|
$0.3020
|
40
|
$0.8270
|
40
|
$0.3138
|
40
|
$0.2250
|
48
|
$0.3884
|
48
|
$1.0254
|
48
|
$0.3138
|
48
|
$0.2850
|
64
|
64
|
|
$1.4222
|
64
|
$0.4662
|
64
|
$0.4050
|
72
|
$0.6476
|
72
|
$1.6206
|
72
|
$0.5526
|
72
|
$0.4650
|
96
|
$0.9068
|
96
|
$2.2158
|
96
|
$0.8118
|
96
|
$0.6450
|
128
|
$1.0988
|
128
|
$2.4078
|
128
|
$1.0038
|
128
|
$0.7250
|
192
|
$1.7132
|
192
|
$3.6942
|
192
|
$1.6182
|
192
|
$1.1250
|
224
|
$2.0204
|
224
|
$4.3374
|
224
|
$1.9254
|
224
|
$1.3250
|
448
|
$4.1708
|
448
|
$8.8398
|
448
|
$4.0758
|
448
|
$2.7250
|
Note: The prices in this table are estimates provided as illustrations of the potential impact from the RHEL pricing update.
vCPU to Instance Size Mapping
vCPU
|
Instance size
|
---|---|
1
|
medium/micro/small |
2
|
large/medium/micro/small |
4
|
xlarge |
8
|
2xlarge |
12
|
3xlarge |
16
|
4xlarge |
24
|
6xlarge |
32
|
8xlarge |
36
|
9xlarge |
40
|
10xlarge |
48
|
12xlarge |
64
|
16xlarge |
72
|
18xlarge |
96
|
24xlarge |
128
|
32xlarge/metal |
192
|
48xlarge/metal |
224
|
56xlarge |
448
|
112xlarge
|
448
|
112xlarge
|
Note: For micro, small, medium, and metal instances, please check the EC2 pricing page for vCPU count based on instance type.