Microsoft announces Azure Savings Plan for Databases


Microsoft has announced “Savings Plan for Databases” – a new option to manage Azure cloud costs, alongside the existing “Savings Plan for Compute”.

Just like the AWS version (announced in December 2025), this helps organisations reduce spend on certain databases while giving additional freedom when compared to Reserved Instances – but, due to the added flexibility, giving lower discount levels.

Rather than committing to a specific service/region etc., Savings Plans allow you to commit to a level of hourly spend that can be applied across a range of services.

Savings Plans for Databases are worth considering when you have a predictable baseline of database spend but still need flexibility in how that spend is consumed. If your environment includes multiple database engines, regions, or services that change over time, committing to a fixed hourly spend can unlock savings without being as specific as with Reserved Instances.

They are particularly useful where workloads are steady in aggregate but variable at an individual service level. If you can reliably forecast a minimum level of database spend each hour, a savings plan can reduce costs while preserving freedom.

Announcing savings plan for databases: flexible savings for modern, evolving workloads | Microsoft Community Hub

What services are covered?

A range of database options, including Cosmos DB, are covered with discount levels varying:

Announcing savings plan for databases: flexible savings for modern, evolving workloads | Microsoft Community Hub

It seems these new Savings Plans are available just in 1-year variants and, assuming they follow the same method as Savings Plan for Compute, can be paid for upfront or monthly with no impact to the total amount.

This announcement helps bring Azure to parity with AWS (in this area) and will enable some organisations to make additional savings. As always, be sure to work out how it will apply to your specific contract and scenario.

See more from Microsoft here – Announcing savings plan for databases: flexible savings for modern, evolving workloads | Microsoft Community Hub

ITAM & FinOps Tools: A crowdsourced list


I get a lot of questions about ITAM, SaaS, & FinOps tools – what is available, what do they do, which are the best etc.

The ITAM market has quite a few tools, there are several SaaS tools, and the FinOps tool market is huge…unnecessarily so some may say. This presents (at least) 2 problems:

  • Potential customers are overwhelmed and don’t know where to start
  • Genuinely innovative tools can be lost in a sea of marketing and promotion

In an attempt to help bring some clarity, I’ve started a crowd-sourced tool list here:

https://airtable.com/appEKdAtvVzFxTc0w/shrkDzHsUBHoEVK21

that currently contains 147 records…this has increase by 14% in the last 2 weeks!

The initial aim is to have a centrally available list of all the tools with some high level categorisation i.e. “SAM”, “FinOps”, “AWS only” etc. From there, I hope to add more info to help people dig deeper. Let me know what would be helpful for you!

If you think I’ve missed any – please add them here:

https://airtable.com/appEKdAtvVzFxTc0w/pagE5AfnBAh50K6ZC/form