fitgap

ProsperOps

Features
Ease of use
Ease of management
Quality of support
Affordability
Market presence
Take the quiz to check if ProsperOps and its alternatives fit your requirements.
Pricing from
Free Trial unavailable
Free version
User corporate size
Small
Medium
Large
User industry
  1. Information technology and software
  2. Media and communications
  3. Banking and insurance

What is ProsperOps

ProsperOps is a cloud cost management tool focused on automating savings on Amazon Web Services (AWS) through continuous optimization of commitment-based discounts. It targets FinOps teams, cloud platform teams, and engineering leaders who want to reduce compute spend without manually managing Reserved Instances and Savings Plans. The product connects to AWS billing and usage data and applies automated purchasing, modification, and allocation logic to improve effective rates over time. It is primarily oriented around AWS commitment optimization rather than broad multi-cloud governance workflows.

pros

Automated commitment optimization

ProsperOps automates the lifecycle management of AWS Reserved Instances and Savings Plans, including purchasing and ongoing adjustments. This reduces the operational burden compared with approaches that rely on manual analysis and periodic commitment decisions. It is well-suited to organizations with frequent workload changes where static commitments can drift from actual usage. The automation focus aligns to cost-optimization use cases more than general cloud orchestration.

FinOps-oriented reporting and allocation

The product provides cost and savings visibility oriented to FinOps workflows, including tracking realized savings and effective rates. It supports analysis that helps teams understand how commitment coverage impacts spend and where optimization opportunities remain. This can complement engineering and finance collaboration by translating technical consumption into financial outcomes. The emphasis is on cost efficiency rather than application performance monitoring.

Low-friction AWS integration

ProsperOps integrates with AWS billing and usage data (e.g., CUR/Cost Explorer) and operates without requiring application code changes. This makes it practical for teams that want savings improvements without re-platforming or refactoring workloads. It can be deployed alongside existing infrastructure-as-code and operational tooling because it focuses on billing constructs. The integration scope is narrower than platforms designed for end-to-end cloud provisioning and governance.

cons

Primarily AWS-focused scope

ProsperOps is centered on AWS commitment instruments, so it is less applicable for organizations that need a single tool to optimize costs across multiple cloud providers. Teams running significant workloads outside AWS may need additional tooling for comparable optimization elsewhere. This can increase tool fragmentation for multi-cloud FinOps programs. It is not positioned as a general multi-cloud management platform.

Limited broader CMP capabilities

Compared with cloud management platforms, ProsperOps does not primarily address provisioning, policy-based governance, configuration management, or workload orchestration. Organizations seeking a unified platform for cloud operations may still require separate tools for automation, compliance controls, and environment management. The product’s value concentrates on financial optimization rather than operational lifecycle management. This may limit adoption where a CMP is the primary buying center.

Less emphasis on non-commitment levers

Commitment optimization improves effective rates but does not replace other cost levers such as rightsizing, storage tiering, architectural changes, or application-level efficiency work. Teams may still need complementary analysis and remediation workflows to address waste outside commitment coverage. If an organization’s savings potential is mostly in non-discount areas, the impact may be constrained. The product is best aligned to environments with meaningful eligible compute spend for commitments.

Plan & Pricing

Pricing model: Mixed usage/outcome-based

Free offering: Free Savings Analysis — "No commitment, 100% free" (one-time analysis / free account to quantify savings). See details under Rate Optimization Evaluation on the vendor pricing page.

Autonomous Discount Management (ADM) — "Share of Savings" outcome-based model:

  • Pricing method: Small percentage of the realized savings as determined by the cloud provider’s billing system (explicitly stated on the official pricing page).
  • Notes: Charged on actual savings generated (not a percentage of total cloud spend). Vendor does not publish the specific percentage bands or rates on the public pricing page — customers are asked to contact sales for terms.

Autonomous Resource Management (ARM) — resource-based flat fee:

  • Pricing method: Flat fee per managed resource, per month (price per resource not published on site).
  • Notes: Scheduler/ARM currently available for AWS Compute ADM customers; vendor asks customers to contact sales for specific per-resource pricing.

Billing & Terms

  • Charges are billed monthly in arrears based on prior month’s savings; Net30 payment terms available with term commitments. (Billing cadence and payment terms documented in the vendor help center.)

Sales / Contact requirement

  • For ADM rate details (percentage) and ARM per-resource fees, the website directs visitors to Contact Sales or request an analysis; no public numeric pricing or tier table is published on the official site.

(Information source: ProsperOps official pricing page, sign-up and help center.)

Seller details

ProsperOps, Inc.
Boston, MA, USA
2018
Private
https://www.prosperops.com/
https://x.com/prosperops
https://www.linkedin.com/company/prosperops/

Tools by ProsperOps, Inc.

ProsperOps

Best ProsperOps alternatives

IBM Turbonomic
IBM Cloudability
CoreStack
Kubecost, an IBM Company
See all alternatives

Popular categories

All categories