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INVOKE Cloud is a cloud cost optimization tool designed to reduce cloud spending caused by idle, unused, or underutilized resources by automatically or on-demand starting and stopping EC2, Azure VM, database, and other resources. It targets DevOps, FinOps, and application teams, with an emphasis on “application-centric” resource availability: when users access an application URL, it can trigger the environment to start, rather than forcing users to wait for a fixed schedule.
The product offers scheduled automation, on-demand start/stop, application-level grouping of multiple instances, startup sequence configuration, and management of resources such as EC2 instances behind ELB and RDS. Its reporting module can identify unused and underutilized resources, then clean them up or right-size them through INVOKE actions. For access control, it supports RBAC with configurable users and groups, so team members can manage only the servers assigned to them; super admins can view activity logs. For integrations, the documentation explicitly mentions a REST API and compatibility with cloud-native capabilities such as AWS CloudWatch, IAM, and Security Group.
Pricing is not transparent, and no specific plans are disclosed. All versions include a 30-day free trial, after which a license must be purchased. In terms of operating cost, INVOKE itself typically requires a relatively small EC2 instance; the text mentions t2.micro/small as well as t2.medium for most installations, depending on workload. Deployment is an important differentiator: the FAQ describes the current offering as an IaaS solution running inside the customer’s own account, while the site also mentions Managed SaaS, though the availability of the SaaS option is described inconsistently.
Its strength is that, compared with a basic EC2 Scheduler, it better fits dynamic team usage scenarios, helping reduce costs while preserving on-demand access. Running inside the customer’s own cloud account also reduces concerns about sharing cloud credentials. The downside is that public materials are inconsistent: some pages claim support for AWS, Azure, and GCP, while the FAQ says only AWS is currently supported. In addition, pricing, SaaS availability, and premium support SLA details are not clearly stated.
It is suitable for enterprises with a large number of development, testing, QA, or non-24x7 production resources, especially teams that want to delegate resource start/stop permissions to application owners without granting access to the cloud account itself. Access from China is not covered in the available text, so it is considered unknown; cross-border access to the official website, AWS/Azure Marketplace, or payment and procurement flows may need to be tested in practice. If deploying in a China-based cloud environment, it is also worth evaluating the cloud provider’s own cost center, automation operations, and cost optimization tools.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on invoke.cloud official site.
invoke.cloud is an Unknown VPS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach invoke.cloud directly.