I've been using AWS on and off since 2015 and my usage has fluctuated quite a bit. Right now, I'm looking to cut down on costs because I've racked up a $400 monthly bill, yet I'm barely using any AWS services. I guess over the years I've accumulated services that I don't even need. The Cost Explorer gives me a general view, but it doesn't break down exactly what I'm being charged for—like seeing 'EC2-Other' for $75.35 or 'Others' for $13.83 this month. Is there a way to pinpoint all the services I'm getting charged for so I can cancel them? I only have a t3 micro instance and a low-traffic serverless website, which shouldn't be costing me more than $30 a month.
3 Answers
You can definitely find the details of your charges by checking your actual bill! AWS provides a line-by-line breakdown that can help you identify exactly what’s racking up the costs. Usually, 'EC2-Others' charges relate to things like NAT Gateways or EBS snapshots. If you need more help, feel free to share a screenshot of your bill, and I'd be happy to help you interpret it!
There’s an article that walks through how to identify resources that might be causing unexpected charges. Check it out [here](https://go.aws/4kfA5jU). If you need more personalized help, the AWS Billing team can certainly assist you as well.
Cost Explorer can be a bit misleading, especially if you have resources like dangling Elastic IPs or leftover EBS volumes. It might be worth checking your charges based on the region and browsing through the listed services. $400 a month seems like a lot for minimal use! If you're not using anything essential, consider trying AWS Nuke to clean up those unused resources.
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