m4.10xlargeAWS Pricing, Specs & Benchmarks
40 vCPUs • 160GB RAM • us-east-1 • x86_64
About AWS m4 instances (legacy general-purpose)
The m4 family is the fourth-generation general-purpose line, originally launched in 2015 on Intel Xeon E5-2676 v3 (Haswell) and v4 (Broadwell) cores. Two generations newer m-instances (m5, m6i, m7i) now deliver roughly 1.5–2× better price/performance, so m4 has shifted into "legacy" status. AWS still sells it in most major regions and many existing workloads still run on it — particularly older AMIs, EBS-only deployments, and apps where re-validation against newer hardware hasn't happened yet. m4.10xlarge at $2.0000/hr On-Demand (~$1440.00/mo) reflects pricing on this older silicon.
The 1:4 vCPU-to-RAM ratio (e.g., m4.large is 2 vCPUs / 8 GB) is the canonical general-purpose mix and hasn't changed across m-generations. If you have an m4 workload and you're CPU- or memory-bound, the migration path is typically: **m5** for a straight performance bump on Skylake, **m6i** for Ice Lake (~15% additional gain at similar pricing), or **m6a / m7a** if you're open to AMD and want the cheapest per-hour rate. **m6g / m7g** are the Graviton equivalents and are usually the cheapest of all if your workload is ARM-compatible.
m4 has no built-in local storage — all storage is EBS over the network. That makes it a poor fit for I/O-heavy workloads (databases doing random writes, log ingestion) without a separately provisioned io2 or gp3 volume. Networking tops out around 10 Gbps on the larger sizes, which is fine for most web traffic but limiting for distributed-system internode chatter. Newer generations (m5n, m6in) offer 25–100 Gbps if that matters.
m4.10xlarge provides 40 vCPUs and 160GB of RAM. Spot is $0.6147/hr (~69% off On-Demand), and because m4 is less in-demand than current-gen, interruption rates tend to be lower than equivalent m5/m6i spot — sometimes a quietly useful niche for cheap batch capacity. If you're evaluating m4 fresh for a new workload, compare it against m5 or m6i in the same vCPU/RAM tier — the newer generations are usually the better deal.
Hardware Specifications
Global Pricing Breakdown
| Region | On-Demand | Spot | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| us-east-2Cheapest On-Demand | $2.0000/hr | $0.6050/hr | 70% |
| us-west-2 | $2.0000/hr | $0.7135/hr | 64% |
| us-east-1 | $2.0000/hr | $0.6147/hr | 69% |
| ap-south-1 | $2.1000/hr | $0.7459/hr | 64% |
| eu-west-1 | $2.2200/hr | $0.9386/hr | 58% |
| ca-central-1 | $2.2200/hr | $0.8022/hr | 64% |
| eu-west-2 | $2.3200/hr | $0.6013/hr | 74% |
| us-west-1 | $2.3400/hr | $0.7384/hr | 68% |
| eu-central-1 | $2.4000/hr | $0.8531/hr | 64% |
| ap-northeast-2 | $2.4600/hr | $0.5890/hr | 76% |
| ap-southeast-1 | $2.5000/hr | $0.9196/hr | 63% |
| ap-southeast-2 | $2.5000/hr | $1.2128/hr | 51% |
| us-gov-west-1 | $2.5200/hr | N/A | - |
| ap-northeast-1 | $2.5800/hr | $0.8230/hr | 68% |
| sa-east-1Cheapest Spot | $3.1800/hr | $0.5173/hr | 84% |
1-Year On-Demand Trajectory
Monthly price tracking
30-Day Spot Price Trajectory
Daily price tracking