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Explore more than 100 products and start building on AWS using the Free Tier. Three different types of free offers are available depending on the product used. Click icon below to explore our offers.


12-Months Free: These free tier offers are only available to new AWS customers, and are available for 12 months following your AWS sign-up date. When your 12 month free usage term expires or if your application use exceeds the tiers, you simply pay standard, pay-as-you-go service rates (see each service page for full pricing details). Restrictions apply; see offer terms for more details.




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Trials: These free tier offers are short term trial offers that start from the time of first usage begins. Once the trial period expires you simply pay standard, pay-as-you-go service rates (see each service page for full pricing details).


The AWS Free Tier provides customers the ability to explore and try out AWS services free of charge up to specified limits for each service. The Free Tier is comprised of three different types of offerings, a 12-month Free Tier, an Always Free offer, and short term trials. Services with a 12-month Free Tier allow customers to use the product for free up to specified limits for one year from the date the account was created. Services with an Always Free offer allow customers to use the product for free up to specified limits as long as they are an AWS customer. Services with a short term trial are free to use for a specified period of time or up to a one-time limit depending on the service selected. Details on the limits and services provided for free are detailed in each card on the Free Tier page. If your application use exceeds the free tier limits, you simply pay standard, pay-as-you-go service rates (see each service page for full pricing details). Restrictions apply; see offer terms for more details.


Services with a 12-month Free Tier allow customers to use the product for free up to specified limits for one year from the date the account was created. Services with an Always Free offer allow you to use the product for free up to specified limits as long as you have a valid AWS account. Services with a short term trial are free to use for a specified period of time or up to a one-time limit depending on the service selected. When your free tier expires or if your application use exceeds the free tier limits, you simply pay standard, pay-as-you-go service rates (see each service page for full pricing details). Restrictions apply; see offer terms for more details.


The AWS Free Tier is available to new AWS accounts. The free tier applies to certain participating AWS services up to a specific maximum amount of usage each month. Applicable services and usage limits are defined at aws.amazon.com/free. When an account goes over the free tier limit, the standard AWS service rates will be billed to your credit card.


If you have not exceeded the limits of the free tier, you may have been charged for other AWS services that are not covered under the free tier. Some examples include: if you are running an Amazon EC2 t2.small instance rather than a t2.micro instance, or if you are using a service not included in the offer, such as Amazon Aurora. To review your AWS usage activity, log into your Billing & Cost Management Dashboard.


The AWS Free Tier applies to participating services across our global regions. Your free usage under the AWS Free Tier is calculated each month across all regions and automatically applied to your bill. For example, you will receive 750 Amazon EC2 Linux Micro Instance hours for free across all of the regions you use, not 750 hours per region. Unused monthly usage will not roll over to future months. The AWS Free Tier is now available in the China (ZHY) and China (BJS) regions as well. The AWS Free Tier is not available in the AWS GovCloud (US) regions, with the exception of Lambda for AWS GovCloud (US).


The EC2 instance sizes available as part of the free tier depends on the region you choose to provision your resources. Some regions like the Middle East (Bahrain) region and the EU (Stockholm) region do not offer t2.micro instances. In cases like these, AWS offers the same 750 hour usage on t3.micro instances as they do for t2.micro instances in other regions. Check the console in the region you plan to provision your resources or use the describe-instance-types API to determine which one is free tier in any specific region.


A 400 Bad Request, also known as a\u00a0400 error\u00a0or\u00a0HTTP error 400, is perceived by the server as a generic client error and it is returned when the server determines the error doesn\u2019t fall in any of the other status code categories.\nThe key concept to understand here is that the 400 Bad Request error is something that has to do with the submitted request from the client\u00a0before\u00a0it is even processed by the server.\nThe Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) defines the\u00a0400 Bad Request\u00a0as:\nThe 400 (Bad Request) status code indicates that the server cannot or will not process the request due to something that is perceived to be a client error (e.g., malformed request syntax, invalid request message framing, or deceptive request routing).\n"},"name":"What is a 400 Bad Request Error?","@type":"Question"},"acceptedAnswer":"@type":"Answer","text":"There are various root causes that can trigger the 400 Bad Request error and, even if this error isn\u2019t specific to any particular browser or OS (operating system), the fixes do vary slightly.\n\n\nURL String Syntax Error\nCorrupted Browser Cache & Cookies\nDNS Lookup Cache\nFile Size Too Large\nGeneric Server Error\n\n\n","name":"What Causes the HTTP 400 Bad Request Error?","@type":"Question","acceptedAnswer":"@type":"Answer","text":"Complete the steps outlined in this section to help diagnose and correct a 400 Bad Request.\nThe proposed solutions include:\n\n1. Check the Submitted URL\n2. Clear Browser Cache\n3. Clear Browser Cookies\n4. File Upload Exceeds Server Limit\n5. Clear DNS Cache\n6. Deactivate Browser Extensions\n\n","name":"How to Fix 400 Bad Request Error?","@type":"Question"]},"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org","@id":"http:\/\/data.wordlift.io\/wl0150038\/post\/a_complete_guide_and_list_of_http_status_codes","@type":"Thing","description":"HTTP status codes are like short notes from a server that get tacked onto a web page. They\u2019re not actually part of the site\u2019s content. Instead, they\u2019re messages from the server letting you know how things went when it received the request to view a certain page. These kinds of messages are returned every time...","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/blog\/http-status-codes\/","image":["@type":"ImageObject","url":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/02\/http-status-codes.png","width":1460,"height":730],"name":"A Complete Guide and List of HTTP Status Codes","sameAs":["http:\/\/www.wikidata.org\/entity\/Q1123288","http:\/\/dbpedia.org\/resource\/List_of_HTTP_status_codes"],"url":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/blog\/http-status-codes\/","@context":"http:\/\/schema.org","@id":"http:\/\/data.wordlift.io\/wl0150038\/knowledgebase\/what_is_dns__domain_name_system_explained","@type":"Thing","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/knowledgebase\/what-is-dns\/","image":["@type":"ImageObject","url":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/05\/what-is-dns.png","width":1460,"height":730],"name":"What Is DNS? Domain Name System Explained","sameAs":["http:\/\/www.wikidata.org\/entity\/Q8767","http:\/\/dbpedia.org\/resource\/Domain_Name_System","http:\/\/rdf.freebase.com\/ns\/m.029zm"],"url":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/knowledgebase\/what-is-dns\/","@context":"http:\/\/schema.org","@id":"http:\/\/data.wordlift.io\/wl0150038\/entity\/matteo_duo","@type":"Person","description":"Matteo Du\u00f2 is the Head of Content at Kinsta and Content Marketing Consultant for WordPress plugin developers. Connect with\u00a0Matteo on Twitter.","image":["@type":"ImageObject","url":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/12\/matteo-duo.jpeg","width":512,"height":512],"name":"Matteo Du\u00f2","sameAs":"https:\/\/twitter.com\/matteoduo","@context":"http:\/\/schema.org","name":"webdev","@type":["Thing"],"@id":"http:\/\/data.wordlift.io\/wl0150038\/post_tag\/webdev","description":"","url":["https:\/\/kinsta.com\/blog\/tag\/webdev\/"],"mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/blog\/tag\/webdev\/","@context":"http:\/\/schema.org","name":"Dev environment questions","@type":["Thing"],"@id":"http:\/\/data.wordlift.io\/wl0150038\/knowledge_categories\/dev","description":"Use this page to browse our frequently asked questions regarding our development environment.","url":["https:\/\/kinsta.com\/knowledge_categories\/dev\/"],"mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/knowledge_categories\/dev\/","@context":"http:\/\/schema.org","name":"Chrome Errors","@type":["Thing"],"@id":"http:\/\/data.wordlift.io\/wl0150038\/term\/topic\/chrome_errors","description":"","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/topic\/chrome-errors\/","@context":"http:\/\/schema.org","name":"Firefox Errors","@type":["Thing"],"@id":"http:\/\/data.wordlift.io\/wl0150038\/term\/topic\/firefox_errors","description":"","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/topic\/firefox-errors\/","@context":"http:\/\/schema.org","name":"HTTP Status Codes","@type":["Thing"],"@id":"http:\/\/data.wordlift.io\/wl0150038\/term\/topic\/http_status_codes","description":"","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/topic\/http-status-codes\/","@context":"http:\/\/schema.org","name":"Website Errors","@type":["Thing"],"@id":"http:\/\/data.wordlift.io\/wl0150038\/term\/topic\/website_errors","description":"","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/kinsta.com\/topic\/website-errors\/"]li code,p code,.wp-block-code,.wp-block-kinsta-notice,.wp-block-kinsta-table-of-contents,.share-staticbackground-color: #f3f3f6;.related-posts background-color: #fafafa;li code,p code border-color: #f3f3f6; Skip to content Test a deployment on our modern App Hosting. For a limited time, your first $20 is on us.


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