AWS bills can climb fast. A few new workloads, some on-demand buying, and suddenly cloud is a top operating cost. For startups and scaling companies, that happens even faster because finance often sees the spend after engineering has already committed it.
AWS discounts are the different ways to pay less for that usage. They include lower pricing for planned usage, deeper rates for flexible workloads, and promotional credits that work like prepaid balance. Since AWS offers more than 200 services, small pricing choices can have a big budget impact. Platforms like Spendbase can also help teams spot savings, access credit programs, and make cloud decisions with less guesswork.
CONTENTS
The main types of AWS discounts finance teams should know
AWS discounts come from a few clear buckets. Some reward commitment. Others reward flexibility. A separate group comes from credits and negotiated offers.
This quick comparison helps frame the options:
| Discount type | Best for | Typical savings |
|---|---|---|
| Savings Plans | Predictable compute usage | Up to 72% |
| Reserved Instances | Very stable EC2 workloads | About 40% to 75% |
| Spot Instances | Fault-tolerant jobs | Up to 90% |
| Startup and promo credits | Early-stage teams, pilots, reviewed workloads | Up to $100,000 in credits |
| Private pricing offers | Larger or growing customers | Custom |
| Service-specific offers | CDN, compute, storage, selected services | Varies by program |
The key takeaway is simple. The highest headline percentage is not always the best fit for your business.
Commitment discounts work best when your usage is steady
Savings Plans and Reserved Instances both reward predictable demand. However, they work a bit differently.
Savings Plans are usually easier for finance teams to live with. You commit to a steady hourly spend for one or three years, and AWS gives lower rates across eligible compute services. That flexibility matters when your team shifts between instance families, regions, or serverless usage.
Reserved Instances are tighter. In exchange, they can offer stronger value for workloads that barely change, such as core production databases or always-on app servers. Standard Reserved Instances often deliver the deepest cuts, while convertible options trade some savings for more flexibility.

Terms usually run one to three years. Because of that, finance leaders should match commitments to proven usage, not optimistic forecasts. If demand is still bouncing around, a flexible discount often beats a bigger promise on paper.
Credits and promo programs can lower early cloud costs fast
Credits can reduce early AWS spend much faster than negotiated rates. While active, they work like prepaid balance for eligible services.
Eligible startups may access programs similar to AWS Activate, with credits that can reach $100,000. Some proof-of-concept programs can add up to $25,000 for new projects. In certain cases, a Well-Architected Framework Review, or WAFR, can unlock credits up to $100,000 for a meaningful workload.

Time limits matter. Some WAFR-linked credits may expire in six months, while startup credits often last 12 to 24 months. Eligibility also varies. AWS and partners may look at company stage, accelerator ties, funding or revenue caps, workload relevance, and company age. For example, some programs target pre-Series B startups founded within the last 10 years.
Beyond credits, some companies can access service-specific offers, such as CloudFront CDN discounts in the 50% to 90% range and lower compute or storage rates, sometimes up to 72% depending on the program and commitment structure.
How to tell which AWS discount fits your company
The right discount depends on where your company is now, not where you hope it will be next year. Founders, COOs, and finance managers should start with that point because a large offer can still be the wrong offer.
Match the offer to your stage, workload, and risk level
Startups usually get the most value from credits first. If you meet program rules, such as being pre-Series B or less than 10 years old, credits can protect cash while you grow. They also reduce the pressure to lock into long commitments too early.
Stable production environments often benefit more from Savings Plans or Reserved Instances. If your application runs all day, every day, commitment discounts can outperform short-term promos. On the other hand, batch processing, testing, analytics jobs, and other interruptible work may fit Spot Instances better because the savings can be steep.
Larger teams with meaningful AWS spend may have room to negotiate private pricing through AWS sales or Marketplace channels. That path usually makes more sense once you have clear usage history and buying power.
Some support programs also let teams explore credits or set up AWS accounts without forcing an immediate migration. That helps companies test options without tearing apart their current cloud setup on day one.
Watch the fine print before you count the savings
This is where many budget models go wrong. A discount only matters if your company can use it.
A $100,000 credit offer is worth far less if half of it expires before your workload ramps.
Check the expiration date first. Then confirm which services qualify, whether minimum usage applies, and whether the offer depends on a formal review. Also watch for funding caps, revenue limits, and partner approval rules.
Private offers need the same scrutiny. A lower rate may still underdeliver if it comes with a spend commitment your team won’t hit. Finance should model likely usage, not best-case usage, before signing anything.
A simple plan to lower AWS spend and avoid wasted credits
Lower AWS spend starts with visibility. If you don’t know which services drive the bill, every discount discussion turns into guesswork.

Start with a usage audit, then layer in the right savings tools
Begin with AWS Cost Explorer and your last few monthly bills. Identify the biggest spend areas first, usually compute, storage, databases, CloudFront, and security services. After that, split workloads into two groups: always-on and variable.
Apply credits first where the rules allow it. Credits have a clock, so use them before they expire. Next, place predictable workloads into Savings Plans or Reserved Instances. Leave bursty or interruptible jobs on Spot or on-demand options where flexibility matters more.
Revisit the model each quarter. Growth changes usage patterns, and last quarter’s commitment may stop fitting quickly. This review cycle also helps finance track renewal dates, unused credits, and service drift.
Teams that want broader support can bring in Spendbase for cloud discount sourcing, vendor negotiation, and better visibility across SaaS and cloud spend. That can save time when internal finance and ops teams are already stretched.
AWS discounts can come from commitments, credits, service-specific offers, and private pricing. The best mix depends on eligibility, workload shape, and how much certainty your team has about future usage.
The smartest finance teams focus on usable savings, not the biggest percentage in a sales pitch. If reducing cloud and software spend is eating too much time, outside help can turn a messy review into a cleaner plan.

Hey, I’m David. I’ve been working as a wireless network engineer and a network administrator for 15 years. During my studies, I also worked as an ISP field technician – that’s when I met Jeremy.
I hold a bachelor’s degree in network engineering and a master’s degree in computer science and engineering. I’m also a Cisco-certified service provider.
In my professional career, I worked for router/modem manufacturers and internet providers. I like to think that I’m good at explaining network-related issues in simple terms. That’s exactly what I’m doing on this website – I’m making simple and easy-to-follow guides on how to install, set up, and troubleshoot your networking hardware. I also review new network equipment – modems, gateways, switches, routers, extenders, mesh systems, cables, etc.
My goal is to help regular users with their everyday network issues, educate them, and make them less scared of their equipment. In my articles, you can find tips on what to look for when buying new networking hardware, and how to adjust your network settings to get the most out of your wi-fi.
Since my work is closely related to computers, servers, and other network equipment, I like to spend most of my spare time outdoors. When I want to blow off some steam, I like to ride my bike. I also love hiking and swimming. When I need to calm down and clear my mind, my go-to activity is fishing.
