Made in Mumbai · used worldwide
Cloud servers from ₹0.236 an hour.
That is the same number you will see on the invoice. Excloud runs NVMe virtual machines on AMD EPYC hardware we design ourselves, in our own racks in Mumbai. Billed by the hour, shown in your currency.
$ curl -fsSL https://excloud.dev/install.sh | bash
✓ running api-1 · 2 vCPU · 1 GiB · mum-1a
- per hour
- ₹0.236
- per day × 24 h
- ₹5.66
- per month × 720 h
- ₹169.92
Products
Twelve services. One page of pricing.
Compute, GPUs, Kubernetes, storage, databases, streams. Each one has a public price and a docs page that tells you the whole story before you spend a rupee.
Compute
Burstable and dedicated AMD EPYC VMs on NVMe, from 2 to 64 vCPUs.
from ₹0.236/hr
GPU
Dedicated RTX Pro Blackwell cards with 32, 48 or 96 GiB of VRAM.
from ₹44.554/hr
Kubernetes
Single-tenant control planes with full admin access. It is your cluster, so you get the keys.
managed
Object Storage
S3-compatible buckets. Moving data in and out costs nothing.
₹1.30/GiB·mo
- Block Storage NVMe volumes, resizable online
- Snapshots Point-in-time copies of any volume
- Managed Databases Provisioned clusters, patched for you
- Kafka Streams KRaft mode, replication factor 3
- Secrets AES-256-GCM, every read audited
- DNS Zones and records, API-first
- Email Outbound, priced per recipient
- LLM Inference Qwen3.6-27B, priced per token
Pricing
The whole rate card fits on one screen.
Every price is public and metered hourly. Stop a machine at 3 a.m. and you stop paying at 3 a.m. If you think in dollars or euros, flip the currency in the header and the numbers follow you around the site.
| Item | Spec | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| t1a.micro VM | 2 vCPU · 1 GiB | ₹0.236/hr |
| m1a.large VM | 2 vCPU · 8 GiB, dedicated | ₹1.889/hr |
| Block storage | NVMe | ₹4/GB·mo |
| Object storage | S3-compatible | ₹1.30/GiB·mo |
| Egress | flat, no tiers | ₹1/GiB |
| Ingress | any volume | free |
The hardware
We build the machines your code runs on.
Most clouds rent racks from someone else and pass the markup on to you. We went the other way and designed our own motherboards, RAM, and power systems, then filled our racks in Mumbai with them.
That decision is where the rate card comes from. When you own the board, the BOM, and the building, you know your costs to the paisa, so you can publish prices to the paisa.
- Motherboards, RAM & power systems designed in-house
- AMD EPYC compute, NVMe storage throughout
- Region mum · zone mum-1a · Mumbai, India
- 99.5% instance SLA, in writing
If you'd rather write HCL than shell, the Terraform provider speaks the same API as the CLI.
Anywhere
One region in Mumbai. Customers everywhere.
Your users don't care where the rack is, and your finance team doesn't want to do currency math. So traffic into Excloud is free from anywhere in the world, IPv6 costs nothing, and the rate card reads in eight currencies. The hardware stays in Mumbai. The cloud doesn't.
t1a.micro, per hour
- INR ₹0.236
- USD $0.0025
- EUR €0.0021
- GBP £0.0019
- JPY ¥0.400
- SGD S$0.0032
- KRW â‚©3.71
- CNY ¥0.017
Same machine, your money. Converted from INR.
The fine print, in large print
Things other clouds put in footnotes.
Egress is flat
₹1/GiB out to the internet, whether you move one GiB or a hundred thousand. Ingress is free. IPv6 is free.
Leaving is easy
Storage speaks S3. Kubernetes is plain Kubernetes with an admin kubeconfig. Databases run engines you already know. Nothing here needs a migration project to walk away from.
Paise are real money
Rates carry three decimal places because hourly billing deserves honest arithmetic. Run a two-hour experiment and you pay for two hours.
Get started
Try it with something small.
A t1a.micro for an entire weekend costs about ₹11. Build the thing you've been putting off. If it doesn't work out, delete the VM and that's the end of the bill.
$ curl -fsSL https://excloud.dev/install.sh | bash