What if you could build your first cloud project without spending a single cent?
Why AWS free tier overview? - Purpose & Use Cases
Start learning this pattern below
Jump into concepts and practice - no test required
Imagine you want to try building a website or app on the cloud, but you have to pay for every little thing from the start.
You might hesitate or give up because you don't want to spend money before you even know if it will work.
Paying upfront or guessing costs can be scary and confusing.
Without a safe way to experiment, you risk wasting money or making mistakes that cost more later.
AWS Free Tier gives you a safe playground with free resources to learn, build, and test without worrying about costs.
This way, you can explore cloud services easily and gain confidence before scaling up.
Launch server -> Pay upfront -> Risk overspending
Use AWS Free Tier -> Try free resources -> Learn without cost
You can explore and build cloud projects freely, turning ideas into reality without financial risk.
A student builds a simple website using AWS Free Tier services like EC2 and S3, learning cloud basics without paying a dime.
AWS Free Tier offers free access to many cloud services for beginners.
It removes cost barriers, making cloud learning safe and easy.
Perfect for experimenting, testing, and small projects.
Practice
Solution
Step 1: Understand AWS Free Tier purpose
The AWS Free Tier is designed to help new users explore AWS services without immediate cost.Step 2: Compare options with this purpose
Only To let users try AWS services without paying initially correctly states this purpose; others describe incorrect or exaggerated features.Final Answer:
To let users try AWS services without paying initially -> Option DQuick Check:
AWS Free Tier = Try services free initially [OK]
- Thinking Free Tier offers unlimited free usage
- Believing Free Tier is only for big companies
- Confusing Free Tier with permanent free accounts
Solution
Step 1: Recall AWS Free Tier typical offers
A common Free Tier offer is 750 hours per month of EC2 t2.micro instance for 12 months.Step 2: Check each option against known offers
750 hours of Amazon EC2 t2.micro instance usage per month for 12 months matches this. Options B, C, and D incorrectly state unlimited or forever free usage which is not true.Final Answer:
750 hours of Amazon EC2 t2.micro instance usage per month for 12 months -> Option BQuick Check:
EC2 Free Tier = 750 hours/month for 12 months [OK]
- Assuming Free Tier offers unlimited or forever free usage
- Confusing daily limits with monthly limits
- Ignoring the 12-month time limit on some offers
Solution
Step 1: Understand Free Tier usage limits
The Free Tier allows 750 hours per month of EC2 t2.micro usage free.Step 2: Calculate excess usage charges
Using 800 hours means 50 hours exceed the free limit, so you pay for those 50 hours.Final Answer:
You are charged for 50 hours of usage -> Option CQuick Check:
Usage > 750 hours = pay excess hours [OK]
- Thinking Free Tier stops instances automatically
- Believing no charges occur after limit
- Assuming unlimited free usage
Solution
Step 1: Recall Free Tier time limits
Most Free Tier offers last for 12 months after account creation.Step 2: Determine status after 13 months
After 13 months, the 12-month Free Tier benefits expire, so you no longer get those free offers.Final Answer:
You no longer get the 12-month Free Tier benefits -> Option AQuick Check:
Free Tier 12 months expired = no more free benefits [OK]
- Thinking Free Tier lasts forever
- Assuming account closes automatically
- Believing unlimited free usage continues
Solution
Step 1: Identify serverless computing service
Amazon Lambda is AWS's serverless compute service.Step 2: Check Free Tier limits for Lambda
Lambda offers 1 million free requests per month under Free Tier, ideal for learning serverless.Step 3: Compare other options
EC2 is not serverless, S3 storage is not unlimited, and RDS multi-AZ is not free.Final Answer:
Amazon Lambda with 1 million free requests per month -> Option AQuick Check:
Serverless = Lambda 1M free requests [OK]
- Confusing EC2 with serverless
- Assuming unlimited free storage on S3
- Thinking RDS multi-AZ is free
