As Amazon announced today, developers can still pay upfront for the full term of the instance (either one or three years), but in addition to this, they can also pay only a portion of the reserved instance upfront cost and then pay the rest later for a slightly higher price. They can also opt to pay nothing upfront, but commit to pay for the instance over the course of the contract. The last option, however, is only available for one-year commitments.
All of these options offer major savings over Amazon’s on-demand pricing, but both of the new options offers fewer savings than paying everything upfront.
What’s gone now is the differentiation between light, medium and heavy utilization — all of which used to come with their own prices. Instead, there is only a single type of reserved instance now.
As Amazon notes, this greatly simplifies the pricing model for these instances.
![2014-12-02_1113](https://tctechcrunch2011.files.wordpress.com/2014/12/2014-12-02_1113.png?w=844&h=513)
Earlier this year, Google announced that it was doing away with reserved instance pricing for its Cloud Platform service altogether. Instead, the company now offers an automatic discount to users who utilize an instance for a longer period. AWS isn’t going quite as far with today’s announcement, but it does now offer developers a bit more flexibility in how they pay for reserved instances.
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