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Instance types: burstable vs dedicated CPU

How to choose between Excloud t1a and m1a instances, with practical guidance for bursty apps, databases, workers, and cost-sensitive services.

17 June 2026 ยท updated 17 June 2026


The smallest VM is not always the right way to run a workload.

Excloud has two main compute families for ordinary CPU workloads: t1a and m1a. Both run on AMD EPYC and attach EBS NVMe volumes. The difference is how you should think about CPU behavior.

Use t1a when the workload is bursty

The t1a class is for workloads that mostly wait and occasionally spike.

Good fits:

  • Small web apps.
  • Dev and staging boxes.
  • Lightweight APIs.
  • Cron workers.
  • Bots and control-plane utilities.
  • Low-traffic internal tools.

A t1a.micro gives you 2 vCPU and 1 GiB RAM at the smallest hourly rate. That is enough for a surprising amount of software if CPU is not pegged all day.

Use m1a when CPU needs to stay predictable

The m1a class is dedicated CPU. Pick it when sustained performance matters.

Good fits:

  • Databases.
  • Busy API servers.
  • Build workers.
  • Queue processors.
  • Kubernetes workers with steady load.
  • Anything that should not depend on burst behavior.

If the process is expected to sit at high CPU for long windows, m1a is usually the honest choice.

The noisy-workload test

Ask one question: if this workload gets noisy, who pays?

If a dev box gets slow during a compile, the answer is usually โ€œone engineer waits.โ€ A burstable instance is fine.

If a database gets slow during a customer checkout, the answer is โ€œusers wait.โ€ Use dedicated CPU.

Cost examples

For a small service, start with:

exc compute create \
  --name web-1 \
  --instance_type t1a.micro \
  --root_volume_size_gib 20 \
  --wait

Move up when memory, CPU, or latency tells you to. A common pattern is:

  • t1a.micro or t1a.small for dev/test.
  • t1a.medium for a small production web node.
  • m1a.large for a production app node that sees steady traffic.
  • m1a.xlarge and above for databases, workers, and sustained services.

The rule of thumb

Choose t1a when utilization is spiky and cost matters most. Choose m1a when performance predictability matters most.

The nice part is that the decision is not permanent. Stop, resize, and start again when the workload outgrows the first guess.