Redis Cloud Essentials is cost-efficient and designed for low-throughput scenarios. It supports a range of availability, persistence, and backup options.

Essentials plan pricing scales according to the memory size of the database defined in the subscription. Additional limits also apply, as shown in the tables below.

The 30 MB Essentials plan is free; it’s designed for learning and building test projects. It gives you enough space to learn Redis concepts and develop application prototypes.

Our paid plans start at 250 MB and offer extra features, like high availability and backups (both daily and instant). They are great for bigger projects or production environments that require increased storage, reliability, and other features to support your operational needs.

If you need additional resources, you can upgrade your subscription at any time.

Current plans

These plans are currently offered for all new and upgraded Essentials subscriptions (updated March 2024).

DB size130 MB (Free)250 MB1 GB2.5 GB5 GB12 GB
Concurrent
connections
per database
3025610242500500010000
CIDR
allow rules
144-84-84-164-32
Monthly
total network
bandwidth
5 GB100 GB200 GB400 GB800 GB2000 GB
Maximum
throughput2
100 ops/sec1000 ops/sec2000 ops/sec4000 ops/sec8000 ops/sec16000 ops/sec
  1. Database size includes replication where applicable. See High availability cost impact for more information.

  2. Assumes request size of 1 KiB. Maximums are capped by actual MB/s reached. To find the MB/s limit, divide the Maximum throughput by 1024.

Previous plans

These plans were available before November 2023.

Max DB size 130 MB100 MB250 MB500 MB1 GB2.5 GB5 GB10 GB
Concurrent
connections
per database
3025625651210242500500010000
Monthly
total network
bandwidth
2
5 GB50 GB100 GB150 GB200 GB400 GB800 GB2000 GB
Maximum
throughput
100 ops/sec500 ops/sec1000 ops/sec1500 ops/sec2000 ops/sec4000 ops/sec8000 ops/sec16000 ops/sec
  1. Database size includes replication. See High availability cost impact for more information.

  2. Assumes request size of 1 KiB. Maximums are capped by actual MB/s reached. To find the MB/s limit, divide the Maximum throughput by 1024.