AWS c5.9xlargevsAWS c5n.9xlarge
c5.9xlarge
c5n.9xlarge
c5.9xlarge vs c5n.9xlarge: how to choose
c5.9xlarge pairs 36 vCPUs with 72GB of RAM at $1.5300/hr On-Demand (about $1102/mo at 24×7). c5n.9xlarge pairs 36 vCPUs with 96GB at $1.9440/hr (~$1400/mo). c5.9xlarge is 27% cheaper per hour than c5n.9xlarge ($0.4140/hr gap).
Both are generation-5 compute-optimized instances, but they run on different silicon: **c5.9xlarge** is Intel Xeon (x86_64), **c5n.9xlarge** is Intel Xeon (x86_64). AMD variants (suffix `a`) are typically 10% cheaper than Intel siblings at comparable single-thread performance. Graviton variants (suffix `g`) are usually 20–40% cheaper but require ARM64-compatible binaries — most modern Linux stacks are fine, but verify any compiled extensions, native modules, or third-party binaries before migrating. Same vCPU/RAM ratio, same network performance class, different processor.
On raw price-per-performance, the two are c5.9xlarge delivers ~28% more single-thread Sysbench score per dollar (772 vs 605 points per $1/hr). That's the cleanest signal we have for "which one runs your workload faster per dollar," but it only matters if your workload is single-thread-bound; for parallel workloads the multi-core scores (32244 vs 32260) are what to weigh. Spot pricing flips many of these comparisons — when c5.9xlarge drops to $0.6712/hr and c5n.9xlarge drops to $0.6398/hr, the cheap-per-hour winner can swing meaningfully.
In practice, pick c5.9xlarge when your workload is closer to compute-optimized (CPU-bound work — batch processing, web servers under sustained load, game servers). Pick c5n.9xlarge when it's closer to compute-optimized (CPU-bound work — batch processing, web servers under sustained load, game servers). When neither side is obviously right, the cheaper hourly rate usually wins for fault-tolerant batch workloads, while the higher single-core score usually wins for latency-sensitive web traffic. The regional pricing tables linked from each instance page below show where each is currently cheapest — sometimes a >20% regional gap flips the comparison entirely.
On-Demand Price Comparison
Monthly trajectory
Spot Price Comparison
30-Day daily trajectory