AWS EventBridge Pricing (2026)
Compare AWS EventBridge prices across all instance types and regions.
On-Demand Pricing
Pay-as-you-go pricing with no upfront commitment. You are billed per hour of usage and can start or stop at any time.
| Instance | Price/hr | Price/mo |
|---|---|---|
| EventBridge (Usage-Based) | - | - |
Reserved Instance & Savings Plans Pricing
Commit to 1 or 3 years for lower hourly rates.
| Instance | Price/hr | Price/mo | 1yr RI/hr | 3yr RI/hr |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EventBridge (Usage-Based) | - | - | - | - |
How EventBridge Pricing Works
On-Demand
Pay per hour with no long-term commitment. Ideal for variable workloads and development environments.
Reserved / Committed Use
Commit to 1 or 3 years for significant discounts.
Spot / Preemptible
Use spare capacity at steep discounts. Best for fault-tolerant, batch, and stateless workloads.
Monthly Cost Examples
Frequently Asked Questions
What is AWS EventBridge?
AWS EventBridge is a cloud service offered by Amazon Web Services. It provides various configurations (1 pricing tiers available) with pay-as-you-go and committed-use pricing options.
Does AWS EventBridge have a free tier?
AWS offers various free tier options. Check the official AWS pricing page for the most current free tier details for EventBridge.
How many AWS EventBridge pricing tiers are available?
There are 1 pricing tiers available for AWS EventBridge. These range from entry-level configurations to high-performance options for enterprise workloads.
What pricing models does AWS EventBridge offer?
AWS EventBridge offers On-Demand (pay-per-hour, no commitment), Reserved/Committed Use (1-3 year commitments for significant discounts), and in some cases Spot/Preemptible pricing for interruptible workloads at the lowest cost.
When does serverless become more expensive than a dedicated instance?
Serverless is typically cheaper for sporadic or bursty workloads under ~1 million invocations per month. Once sustained utilization exceeds 30-40% of a dedicated instance, a reserved VM or container usually costs less. Profile your actual request patterns before committing to either model.