Reserved Instances are not dead. Savings Plans cover compute and SageMaker. Standard, Convertible, Compute, EC2 Instance, SageMaker, and the EDP layer above. The metric, the math, the coverage strategy, and the buyer side framework procurement teams use to commit on AWS in 2026.
AWS commitment discounts come in two families. Reserved Instances and Savings Plans. Both predate the Enterprise Discount Program. Both stack with EDP. The right mix is workload specific.
The wrong commitment is expensive. A three year all upfront RI on the wrong instance family locks the customer into a depreciation schedule with no exit.
This article gives the buyer side framework. Pair it with the AWS hub, the EDP discount benchmarks, the AWS contract negotiation, and the commitment calculator.
Reserved Instances are the older commitment vehicle. They cover EC2 instances in a specific region, family, OS, and tenancy. RIs come in Standard and Convertible flavors with payment options.
| Dimension | Standard RI | Convertible RI |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum discount | Up to 72 percent | Up to 66 percent |
| Instance flexibility | Locked to family | Can swap to different family |
| Term | 1 or 3 year | 1 or 3 year |
| Payment options | All upfront, partial upfront, no upfront | Same three options |
| Resale on RI Marketplace | Yes | No |
| Best for | Stable steady state workloads | Workloads with future family change |
Savings Plans are the newer vehicle but RIs still apply on RDS, ElastiCache, OpenSearch, Redshift, and DynamoDB. Some workloads have no Savings Plan equivalent. The buyer side audit identifies which workloads are RI only and which have SP options.
Savings Plans launched in 2019 as the more flexible commitment vehicle. They commit to a dollar per hour spend rather than a specific instance. Three plan families exist.
Each Savings Plan family supports All Upfront, Partial Upfront, and No Upfront payment options. The discount band shifts roughly 5 percentage points across the three options.
The two families look similar at the high level but differ on five practical dimensions.
| Dimension | Reserved Instances | Savings Plans |
|---|---|---|
| Commitment unit | Instance hour | Dollar per hour |
| Service coverage | EC2, RDS, ElastiCache, others | EC2, Fargate, Lambda, SageMaker |
| Region flexibility | Standard locked, Convertible swappable | Compute SP region flexible |
| Family flexibility | Standard locked, Convertible swappable | Compute SP family flexible |
| Resale option | Standard RI on Marketplace | None |
The right commitment vehicle depends on workload behavior. Three workload archetypes drive the decision.
The general buyer side rule is to cover roughly 70 percent of steady state with commitment vehicles and run the remaining 30 percent on On Demand. The 70 percent target balances the discount upside against the commitment risk on workload change.
The two scenarios below walk the math on a typical workload mix.
500 m6i.xlarge in us east 1 running 24x7. On Demand list 0.192 per hour times 8,760 hours times 500 instances equals 840,960 per year. Three year all upfront EC2 Instance SP at roughly 65 percent off equals 294,336 per year. Annual savings 546,624.
1,000 EC2 instances baseline plus 400 burst plus 200 Fargate tasks. Compute Savings Plan covering baseline at 60 percent off equals roughly 580,000 per year on a 1.45 million baseline. The remaining burst and Fargate run on On Demand at roughly 360,000 per year. Total cost 940,000 per year against an On Demand only baseline of 1.81 million.
The commitment vehicles have predictable failure modes. Each pitfall has a buyer side control.
| Pitfall | Buyer side control |
|---|---|
| Standard RI on a family that gets retired | Use Convertible RI for older families, switch on retirement |
| Compute Savings Plan over committed | Cap commitment at 70 percent of steady state |
| Three year all upfront on volatile workload | Use one year no upfront on volatile workloads |
| SageMaker Savings Plan on experimental workload | Run experimental on On Demand, commit only after stabilization |
| EDP applied below RI and SP | EDP stacks on top, verify the math on the bill |
| RI Marketplace resale at deep loss | Identify excess RIs at month three, list early on Marketplace |
The eight step checklist below runs the buyer side process. The work fits inside a 90 day commitment planning window.
Up to 72 percent for Standard Reserved Instances on three year all upfront payment. Convertible RIs reach 66 percent on the same payment option. The actual discount depends on the instance family, region, OS, and tenancy. The discount table is published by AWS and updated periodically.
RIs commit to a specific instance configuration. Savings Plans commit to a dollar per hour spend across a family or all of compute. RIs cover EC2, RDS, ElastiCache, OpenSearch, Redshift, DynamoDB. Savings Plans cover EC2, Fargate, Lambda, and SageMaker. RIs offer a Marketplace resale option. Savings Plans do not.
EC2 Instance SP is cheaper but locks to a family and region. Compute SP is more flexible across families and regions but offers a lower discount. The right choice depends on workload predictability. Stable single family workloads suit EC2 Instance SP. Multi family or migration workloads suit Compute SP.
Roughly 70 percent of steady state. The 70 percent target balances the discount upside against the commitment risk on workload change. The remaining 30 percent runs on On Demand to absorb burst and to cover workload churn. Some mature programs push to 80 percent on the most stable workloads.
Yes. The EDP discount applies on top of the commitment vehicle discount. The math runs Commitment first, EDP on the post commitment number. Verify the math on the AWS bill in the first month after EDP execution. The EDP percentage on the line items reflects the stacked discount.
Standard RIs can be listed on the AWS Reserved Instance Marketplace. Convertible RIs cannot be sold. The Marketplace resale typically lands 30 to 60 percent of the remaining commitment value depending on instance family demand. The earlier the listing the higher the recovery.
Redress runs the AWS commitment audit, the workload archetype mapping, and the EDP stacking verification on the buyer side. The deliverable is a defended commitment portfolio, a defended coverage band, and a defended EDP envelope across the term.
Read the related Vendor Shield, the Renewal Program, the Benchmark Program, the Software Spend Assessment, the Benchmarking framework, the about us page, the management team page, the locations page, and the contact page.
A buyer side framework for the next AWS commitment cycle. Includes the Reserved Instance versus Savings Plan map, the EDP discount benchmark, the commitment coverage matrix, and the cost modeling templates used on every AWS engagement.
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