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AWS Updates - 2026-01-16

AWS What's New

Amazon S3 Storage Lens is now available in AWS GovCloud (US) Regions

Amazon S3 Storage Lens provides organization-wide visibility into your storage usage and activity. S3 Storage Lens is now available in AWS GovCloud (US) Regions, bringing metrics to help you optimize storage costs, identify data protection opportunities, and improve application performance.

S3 Storage Lens provides a single view of object storage usage and activity across thousands of accounts in an organization, with drill-downs to generate insights at multiple aggregation levels. You can optimize storage costs by identifying prefixes with incomplete multipart uploads or buckets accumulating non-current object versions. You can identify buckets that don’t follow your data protection best practices, such as using S3 Cross-Region Replication to replicate data across AWS Regions or S3 Versioning to keep multiple versions of an object. With the newly added performance metrics, you can identify application performance constraints—for example, using request and object size distribution metrics to detect inefficient access patterns or tracking cross-Region data transfer to reduce latency and costs.

Amazon S3 Storage Lens is available in all AWS Regions. S3 Storage Lens is pre-configured to receive free metrics by default for all customers and 14 days of historical data. For more detailed visibility with up to 15 months data retention, you can upgrade to S3 Storage Lens advanced metrics. To learn more about S3 Storage Lens metrics, including free and advanced metrics, refer to the documentation. For S3 Storage Lens Advanced pricing details, visit the Amazon S3 pricing page.


Amazon MWAA now available in additional Region

Amazon Managed Workflows for Apache Airflow (MWAA) is now available in AWS Region Asia Pacific (Thailand).

Amazon MWAA is a managed service for Apache Airflow that lets you use the same familiar Apache Airflow platform as you do today to orchestrate your workflows and enjoy improved scalability, availability, and security without the operational burden of having to manage the underlying infrastructure. Learn more about using Amazon MWAA on the product page.
Please visit the AWS region table for more information on AWS regions and services. To learn more about Amazon MWAA visit the Amazon MWAA documentation.

Apache, Apache Airflow, and Airflow are either registered trademarks or trademarks of the Apache Software Foundation in the United States and/or other countries.


AWS Outposts racks support multiple LGW routing domains

AWS Outposts racks now support multiple local gateway (LGW) routing domains, enabling you to create up to 10 isolated routing domains per Outpost, each with independent route tables and BGP sessions to your on-premises network. This feature provides traffic separation between routing domains and enables both customer-owned IP (CoIP) and direct VPC routing (DVR) modes on the same Outpost.

With multiple LGW routing domains, you can segment on-premises network connectivity for different departments or business units sharing an Outpost. Each routing domain maintains its own LGW VIF Group, LGW Route Table, and VPC associations, preventing traffic from crossing between domains. You can configure multiple LGW routing domains through the AWS Management Console or AWS CLI.

Multiple LGW routing domains is available on second-generation Outposts racks at no additional charge. See the FAQs for Outposts racks for the latest list of supported AWS Regions.

To learn more about implementation details and best practices, check out this blog post or visit our technical documentation.


Second-generation AWS Outposts racks are now supported in additional AWS Regions

Second-generation AWS Outposts racks are now supported in the South America (Sao Paulo) and Europe (Stockholm) Regions. Outposts racks extend AWS infrastructure, AWS services, APIs, and tools to virtually any on-premises data center or colocation space for a truly consistent hybrid experience.

Organizations from startups to enterprises and the public sector in and outside of Europe and South America can now order their Outposts racks connected to these new supported regions, optimizing for their latency and data residency needs. Outposts allows customers to run workloads that need low latency access to on-premises systems locally while connecting back to their home Region for application management. Customers can also use Outposts and AWS services to manage and process data that needs to remain on-premises to meet data residency requirements. This regional expansion provides additional flexibility in the AWS Regions that customers’ Outposts can connect to.

To learn more about second-generation Outposts racks, read this blog post and user guide. For the most updated list of countries and territories and the AWS Regions where second-generation Outposts racks are supported, check out the Outposts rack FAQs page.


AWS Outposts racks support multiple LGW routing domains

AWS Outposts racks now support multiple local gateway (LGW) routing domains, enabling you to create up to 10 isolated routing domains per Outpost, each with independent route tables and BGP sessions to your on-premises network. This feature provides traffic separation between routing domains and enables both customer-owned IP (CoIP) and direct VPC routing (DVR) modes on the same Outpost.

With multiple LGW routing domains, you can segment on-premises network connectivity for different departments or business units sharing an Outpost. Each routing domain maintains its own LGW VIF Group, LGW Route Table, and VPC associations, preventing traffic from crossing between domains. You can configure multiple LGW routing domains through the AWS Management Console or AWS CLI.

Multiple LGW routing domains is available on second-generation Outposts racks at no additional charge. See the FAQs for Outposts racks for the latest list of supported AWS Regions.

To learn more about implementation details and best practices, check out this blog post or visit our technical documentation.


Amazon Bedrock Reserved Tier available now for Claude Opus 4.5 and Haiku 4.5

Today, Amazon Bedrock announces the expansion of the Reserved service tier designed for workloads requiring predictable performance and guaranteed tokens-per-minute capacity. The Reserved tier provides the ability to reserve prioritized compute capacity, keeping service levels predictable for your mission critical applications. It also includes the flexibility to allocate different input and output tokens-per-minute capacities to match the exact requirements of your workload and control cost. This is particularly valuable because many workloads have asymmetric token usage patterns. For instance, summarization tasks consume many input tokens but generate fewer output tokens, while content generation applications require less input and more output capacity. When your application needs more tokens-per-minute capacity than what you reserved , the service automatically overflows to the pay-as-you-go Standard tier, ensuring uninterrupted operations. The Reserved tier and is available today for Anthropic Claude Opus 4.5 and Claude Haiku 4.5. Customers can reserve capacity for 1 month or 3 month duration. Customers pay a fixed price per 1K tokens-per-minute and are billed monthly.

With the expansion of the Reserved service tier, Amazon Bedrock continues to provide more choice to customers, helping them develop, scale, and deploy applications and agents that improve productivity and customer experiences while balancing performance and cost requirements.

For more information about the AWS Regions where Amazon Bedrock Reserved tier is available, refer to the Documentation. To get access to the Reserved tier, please contact your AWS account team. 


Amazon EC2 High Memory U7i instances now available in additional regions

Amazon EC2 High Memory U7i instances are available in new regions. U7i-6tb.112xlarge instances are now available in AWS Asia Pacific (Thailand, Sydney, Singapore), Canada (Central), and AWS GovCloud (US-East), u7i-8tb.112xlarge instances are now available in AWS South America (Sao Paulo), and u7in-16tb.224xlarge instances are now available in AWS GovCloud (US-East). U7i instances are part of AWS 7th generation and are powered by custom fourth generation Intel Xeon Scalable Processors (Sapphire Rapids). U7i-6tb instances offer 6TiB of DDR5 memory, U7in-8tb instances offer 8TiB of DDR5 memory, and U7in-16tb instances offer 16TiB of DDR5 memory, enabling customers to scale transaction processing throughput in a fast-growing data environment.

U7i-6tb and U7i-8tb instances offer 448 vCPUs, support up to 100Gbps Elastic Block Storage (EBS) for faster data loading and backups, deliver up to 100Gbps of network bandwidth, and support ENA Express. U7in-16tb instances offer 896 vCPUs, support up to 100Gbps Elastic Block Storage (EBS) for faster data loading and backups, deliver up to 200Gbps of network bandwidth, and support ENA Express. U7i instances are ideal for customers using mission-critical in-memory databases like SAP HANA, Oracle, and SQL Server. 

To learn more about U7i instances, visit the High Memory instances page.


AWS Security Blog

Implementing data governance on AWS: Automation, tagging, and lifecycle strategy – Part 2

In Part 1, we explored the foundational strategy, including data classification frameworks and tagging approaches. In this post, we examine the technical implementation approach and key architectural patterns for building a governance framework. We explore governance controls across four implementation areas, building from foundational monitoring to advanced automation. Each area builds on the previous one, […]


Implementing data governance on AWS: Automation, tagging, and lifecycle strategy – Part 1

Generative AI and machine learning workloads create massive amounts of data. Organizations need data governance to manage this growth and stay compliant. While data governance isn’t a new concept, recent studies highlight a concerning gap: a Gartner study of 300 IT executives revealed that only 60% of organizations have implemented a data governance strategy, with […]