Stop guessing on Reserved Instances. Use real usage data to commit to the right VM families, sizes, regions, and terms, so you unlock maximum discounts without locking your business into the wrong decision.
average reduction in compute waste
unlocked through smarter commitments
oversized resources identified monthly
VM families, sizes, regions, and terms create complexity that Azure-native tools don’t simplify.
A wrong reservation can trap teams in an unused SKU for up to three years, making teams hesitant to commit.
Without visibility into actual usage, teams either over-commit or avoid reservations altogether.
Reservations expire unnoticed, underutilization goes undetected, and savings quietly disappear.
Identify safe reservation opportunities, track utilization, and manage the full lifecycle to maintain predictable savings.
Turbo360 analyzes historical VM usage patterns to recommend the right Azure Reserved Instances by VM family, size, region, and term. Recommendations are based on consistent baseline usage and runtime behavior, ensuring reservations are practical, safe, and deliver real savings.
Each recommendation is validated against workload stability and usage trends so teams understand whether a resource is safe for long-term commitment. This removes guesswork, reduces fear of lock-in, and helps engineering and finance align before making one- or three-year reservation decisions.
Turbo360 continuously tracks reservation utilization and flags unused or partially used commitments early. Teams can quickly identify waste, understand which workloads or owners are responsible, and take corrective action before underutilization turns into sustained financial loss.
Monitor reservations from purchase through expiry with proactive alerts and renewal guidance. Turbo360 highlights upcoming expirations, recommends renewals or replacements based on current usage, and helps teams maintain continuous savings without missing discounts or overcommitting.
Reservations are mapped to teams, applications, or business units so accountability is clear. Engineering understands which workloads rely on commitments, while finance gains transparency into who benefits, enabling better governance and more informed long-term cost planning.