
Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Container Engine for Kubernetes
Container management software
Container orchestration tools
DevOps software
Containerization software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
Take the quiz to check if Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Container Engine for Kubernetes and its alternatives fit your requirements.
$0.10 per cluster per hour
Small
Medium
Large
- Education and training
- Transportation and logistics
- Banking and insurance
What is Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Container Engine for Kubernetes
Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Container Engine for Kubernetes (OKE) is a managed Kubernetes service on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure used to deploy, run, and scale containerized applications. It targets platform teams and DevOps engineers who want Kubernetes clusters without managing the control plane infrastructure. OKE integrates with OCI networking, identity and access management, and observability services, and it supports common Kubernetes tooling for cluster operations and application delivery.
Managed Kubernetes control plane
OKE provides a managed Kubernetes control plane, reducing the operational work required to run core Kubernetes components. This supports teams that want standard Kubernetes APIs while offloading control-plane patching and availability responsibilities. It fits organizations standardizing on Kubernetes but preferring a cloud-managed service rather than self-managed clusters.
Deep OCI service integration
OKE integrates closely with OCI primitives such as virtual networking, load balancing, identity policies, and logging/monitoring services. This can simplify cluster connectivity, access control, and operational visibility when the rest of the stack already runs on OCI. The integration also supports consistent governance patterns across OCI resources.
Kubernetes ecosystem compatibility
OKE uses upstream Kubernetes concepts and supports common Kubernetes tooling and workflows, which helps portability of manifests and CI/CD practices. Teams can apply standard Kubernetes skills for deployments, scaling, and cluster administration. This reduces lock-in at the API level compared with platforms that abstract Kubernetes behind proprietary interfaces.
OCI-specific operational coupling
While Kubernetes APIs are standard, day-to-day operations often depend on OCI-specific networking, IAM, and load balancing constructs. This can increase the effort to replicate the same architecture across other environments. Organizations pursuing multi-cloud parity may need additional abstraction and tooling.
Kubernetes expertise still required
OKE manages the control plane, but users still need to design and operate workloads, namespaces, RBAC, ingress, and resource policies. Troubleshooting cluster and application issues typically requires Kubernetes and container networking knowledge. Teams looking for a higher-level application platform may find the learning curve significant.
Cost and quota complexity
Total cost depends on worker nodes, networking, load balancing, storage, and data transfer, which can be difficult to estimate without detailed usage modeling. Service limits and quotas across OCI components can also affect cluster sizing and rollout plans. This can add planning overhead for fast-scaling environments.
Plan & Pricing
| Plan | Price | Key features & notes |
|---|---|---|
| Basic cluster | Free | No control-plane fee; no access to virtual nodes or add-ons; no financially-backed SLA. |
| Enhanced cluster (control plane) | $0.10 per cluster/hour (capped at $74.40 per month) | Control plane with a financially guaranteed SLA; includes access to virtual nodes and add-ons. Worker nodes (OCPU & memory) are billed separately as OCI Compute instances (per chosen shape). |
| Virtual Node (worker) | $0.015 per virtual node/hour | Additional runtime usage fee for virtual nodes used as worker nodes. |
Notes: Compute, storage, networking and other infrastructure consumption for worker nodes are billed according to OCI Compute, Block Storage, Networking, etc. (worker node OCPU/memory priced the same as OCI Compute instances for the chosen shape).
Seller details
Oracle Corporation
Austin, Texas, USA
1977
Public
https://www.oracle.com/
https://x.com/oracle
https://www.linkedin.com/company/oracle/