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> Determining which option is more cost-effective requires a thorough TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) analysis. While Hetzner may seem cheaper upfront, the additional hours required for DevOps work can offset those savings.

Sure, but the TLDR is going to be that if you employ n or more sysadmins, the cost savings will dominate. With 2 < n < 7. So for a given company size, Hetzner will start being cheaper at some point, and it will become more extreme the bigger you go.

Second if you have a "big" cost, whatever it is, bandwidth, disk space (essentially anything but compute), cost savings will dominate faster.



Not always. Employing Sysadmins doesn't mean Hetzner is cheaper because those "Sysadmin/Ops type people" are being hired to managed the Kubernetes cluster. And Ops type people who truly know Kubernetes are not cheap.

Sure, you can get away with legoing some K3S stuff together for a while but one major outage later, and that cost saving might have entirely disappeared.


More than that: the more you use, the more discounts you can get from a major CSP, which would also reduce the TCO for using a managed service.


Even a short outage can completely wipe out any savings.




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