CostPatrol vs nOps
Two different approaches to AWS cost optimization. One takes the controls. The other keeps you in command.
Quick comparison
| Feature | CostPatrol | nOps |
|---|---|---|
| Approach | Expert-encoded rules, you execute | Autonomous automation, it executes |
| AWS access | Read-only (zero write) | Write access required |
| Delivery | Slack-first with exact CLI commands | Dashboard + automated actions |
| What it covers | Idle resources, oversized infra, migrations, anomalies (111 rules) | Compute (Spot/RI/SP lifecycle), some waste detection |
| Pricing | $99-499/mo flat | From $199/mo (Cost Visibility); share-of-savings for autonomous optimization |
| Setup | 2-min CloudFormation, read-only IAM | More complex, requires write IAM policies |
| AI/ML | No — deterministic rules, fully explainable | Yes — ML-based optimization |
| Managed tier | Monthly FinOps assessment (architecture review, strategic recs) | Not available |
When to choose CostPatrol
You want to stay in control of your infrastructure
CostPatrol delivers exact CLI commands with resource ARNs and dollar amounts. Your team reviews every change before it happens. No automated modifications, no surprises.
Your security team won't approve write access for a third-party tool
CostPatrol connects via a read-only IAM role deployed through CloudFormation. Zero write permissions. Zero risk of unintended changes. Security review takes minutes, not weeks.
You want exact CLI commands, not automated changes
Every finding includes a copy-paste CLI command, the resource ARN, and the monthly savings amount. Your engineers run the commands in their own workflow, on their own schedule.
You need resource-level waste detection, not just commitment optimization
100+ detection rules across 30+ AWS services find idle EC2 instances, unattached EBS volumes, oversized RDS clusters, CloudWatch log retention waste, NAT Gateway data transfer issues, and more. nOps focuses primarily on compute commitment lifecycle.
You want Slack delivery, not another dashboard
Daily digests with ranked findings delivered to your team's Slack channel every morning. Resolve, ignore, or snooze directly from Slack. No new dashboard to check.
You're spending $10K-$200K/mo on AWS
CostPatrol is built for engineering teams in this spend range. Flat pricing from $99/mo. nOps targets larger accounts where share-of-savings pricing makes more sense at scale.
When to choose nOps
You want fully autonomous Spot/RI/SP management
nOps Compute Copilot automates Spot instance placement, Reserved Instance purchases, and Savings Plan commitments. If your primary goal is hands-off commitment optimization, nOps handles the lifecycle automatically.
You're comfortable granting write access
nOps requires write IAM permissions to execute changes on your behalf. If your security posture allows third-party write access and you trust automated actions, nOps can act faster than manual execution.
Your primary cost driver is compute commitments, not resource waste
If most of your AWS spend is on EC2/compute and you need Spot orchestration or commitment management, nOps is purpose-built for that use case. CostPatrol covers broader resource-level waste.
You prefer share-of-savings pricing
nOps charges a percentage of the savings it generates for autonomous optimization. Cost Visibility & Allocation starts at $199/mo flat. This model can work well for larger accounts where absolute savings are high and predictable.
A note on nOps reviews
nOps holds a 95% satisfaction rating on G2 across 190+ reviews and ranks #1 in cloud cost management for its commit optimization features. Users frequently praise the Savings Plan automation. Common criticisms include a steep learning curve for initial setup and limited integration with non-AWS environments for multi-cloud teams. It is a well-regarded tool in its lane — the question is whether that lane matches your needs.
The read-only difference
CostPatrol connects to your AWS account via a read-only IAM role. It will never modify, delete, or terminate any resource. This is not a limitation — it is the product philosophy.
Most AWS cost tools ask for write access because they want to auto-remediate: terminate instances, modify reservations, purchase Savings Plans on your behalf. That works until it doesn't. One misconfigured automation can take down production workloads or commit you to the wrong Savings Plan for three years.
CostPatrol takes a different approach. It scans your account, finds waste and anomalies, and delivers exact CLI commands with resource ARNs and dollar amounts. Your team runs the commands. Your team reviews the changes. Your team stays in control.
The read-only IAM role is deployed via CloudFormation in under 2 minutes. Your security team can review every permission before deployment. No write access, no risk of unintended changes, no multi-week security review.
The Agentic FinOps question
The dominant 2026 trend in cloud cost management is Agentic FinOps — autonomous AI agents that purchase commitments, resize infrastructure, and manage Spot fleets without human approval. Platforms like nOps are pushing further in this direction. The industry is bifurcating between automation-first platforms and engineering-led optimization.
CostPatrol sits firmly in the engineering-led camp — and deliberately so. Agentic autonomy introduces risks that are easy to underestimate:
- Loss of control — automated actions happen faster than your team can audit them, making post-hoc review the only option.
- Commitment lock-in — automated RI and Savings Plan purchases create 1-3 year financial obligations. A wrong commitment at scale is expensive to unwind and may trigger CAPEX vs. opex reclassification issues.
- Vendor dependency — organizations must define clear guardrails before enabling full autonomy, and those guardrails live inside the vendor's platform, not yours.
CostPatrol gives you the intelligence of an autonomous agent with the control of a human-in-the-loop workflow. 30-40% of cloud spend is wasted on average — with compute representing 50-70% of AWS bills and 60-70% oversizing rates common. You don't need an agent to fix that. You need clear findings and exact commands.
Read more about our security posture on the Security & Trust page.
Frequently asked questions
Is nOps free?
No. nOps pricing starts at $199/mo for Cost Visibility & Allocation (a flat fee based on your spend tier). Their Autonomous Rate Optimization — covering Spot, Reserved Instance, and Savings Plan management — uses share-of-savings pricing, where you pay a percentage of the savings generated. Costs can scale significantly on larger accounts. CostPatrol is flat $99-499/mo regardless of how much you save, with no percentage taken.
Does nOps require write access?
Yes, nOps Compute Copilot requires write IAM permissions to automatically manage Spot instances, Reserved Instances, and Savings Plans. CostPatrol is read-only always — it never modifies, deletes, or terminates any resource in your AWS account.
What's the difference between CostPatrol and nOps?
CostPatrol delivers expert-encoded detection rules with exact CLI fix commands to Slack. nOps auto-remediates with write access. CostPatrol covers resource-level waste across 30+ AWS services with 111 rules. nOps focuses on compute commitment optimization (Spot, RI, Savings Plans). CostPatrol is $99-499/mo flat. nOps uses share-of-savings pricing.
Which is better for startups, CostPatrol or nOps?
CostPatrol starts at $99/mo flat with no write access required. nOps uses share-of-savings pricing and targets larger accounts. For teams spending $10K-$200K/mo who want to stay in control of their infrastructure, CostPatrol is designed for you.
See what CostPatrol finds on your account
100+ expert-encoded rules. Read-only access. Exact CLI commands to Slack. Results in minutes.