I
I
investr7772020-03-09 13:03:13
Amazon Web Services
investr777, 2020-03-09 13:03:13

What happens if I don't pay my AWS bill?

I decided to get acquainted with the AWS service. I registered a free account, tied it to a card on which there was $ 1 and no more funds were received there. At the end of January, it came to me that I needed to pay the bill. Like, they tried to withdraw from the card, but it didn’t work out, and if it’s not possible to write off before February 29, the account will be blocked. I thought that on a free account they somehow limit the actions so that a person getting acquainted with the resource does not fly into the money, but that was not the case. At the end of February, I received a letter again, already with a big bill, and with the text if you don’t pay before February 29, they will block your account, I saw these letters only yesterday. I think let me look at the accounts in the account. And there is already $ 1,500. Here is a free account. And somehow, for some reason, they didn’t block him, but continued to provide access, although judging from the letters to the mail, they should have been blocked, as promised, but alas. So here it is With such a policy of theirs, I myself blocked the account. Now the question is, if you do not pay these bills, what will happen?

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

6 answer(s)
F
fdroid, 2020-03-09
@fdroid

If you don't pay these bills, what will happen?

you will save $1500 and will no longer be able to use AWS.
Clouds, they said, are fashionable, stylish, youthful.

I
Ivan Shumov, 2020-03-09
@inoise

AWS does not limit the use of resources (they only have soft limits in principle for services). In the clouds, you always pay for what you use. For small amounts, they usually simply block accounts, for large amounts they can sue if it gets hot.
Free tier means that part of the resources you have as a bonus is a limited amount of resources used every month, no more.
I advise you to log into your account, look at the billing what is happening, disable the resources used.

A
antonwx, 2020-03-09
@antonwx

Nothing will happen. You block the card that you linked so that they don’t inadvertently write off it, and you forget about the account, or better yet, delete it. Court? Brad, any court will blow this claim to smithereens without a qualified digital signature or physical signature.

B
bozanovs, 2020-11-13
@bozanovs

Better pay. I was calculated through bank cards (they went to the bank) + my computer was calculated, apparently they have some kind of trackers, although I used fake data when registering, I had to pay almost 100 thousand

J
junior kamikaze, 2021-03-02
@junior kamikaze

What was the end of this story? I have the same situation. Wrote to support. they answered me right away, they said that it was possible to make an exception for me for the first time. I don't know about the final decision yet. The support said that there are three options: they will return the entire amount, they will return part of the amount (if it is large, I would not want to pay it), they will not return anything.

N
Nataly7588, 2020-07-17
@Nataly7588

I also had a similar situation, I was also first billed for 1,500 dollars, then it was debited, then the next month they took 600 dollars from the card, then I wrote to support and did not return 365 bucks, and now in July I again got some kind of bill for more than 500 bucks and they say that this is some kind of re-formation of the account, this account was also free and where such accounts come from is not at all clear

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question