
AWS Cost and Usage Report
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What is AWS Cost and Usage Report
Granular line-item billing data
S3-based export for analytics
Native AWS billing integration
Not a full FinOps UI
Setup and modeling complexity
AWS-only scope
Plan & Pricing
Pricing model: Pay-as-you-go
Summary: AWS Cost and Usage Reports (AWS CUR) is provided as a billing data export delivered to an Amazon S3 bucket you own. AWS CUR does not have subscription tiers listed on the official product or documentation pages; instead, customers incur charges for the underlying AWS services used to store, transfer, and analyze the CUR files (for example: Amazon S3 storage & requests, data transfer; Amazon Athena query costs; Amazon Redshift ingestion/compute; Amazon QuickSight BI/visualization usage). See official AWS docs and pricing pages for each service.
Free tier/trial: Not stated on CUR product/docs pages (see notes below).
Example costs (official AWS pricing pages):
- Amazon S3 — storage, requests, and data transfer are billed per S3 pricing (see Amazon S3 pricing page). (region- and storage-class-specific rates apply).
- Amazon Athena — SQL queries billed based on data scanned (example: $5 per TB scanned shown in Athena examples); Provisioned Capacity and Apache Spark options also described on Athena pricing page.
- Amazon Redshift — if you load CUR data into Redshift, you will be charged according to Redshift pricing (provisioned or serverless) and storage.
- Amazon QuickSight — BI/visualization billing (per-user or capacity pricing) applies when using QuickSight dashboards on CUR data.
Discounts / Options: Use standard AWS volume/commitment discounts, reserved pricing, or capacity pricing where applicable (per the individual service pricing pages).