Yes, cloud computing is generally cheaper than on-premise infrastructure because it replaces high initial capital investments (CAPEX) with predictable operational costs (OPEX). It eliminates expenses related to hardware maintenance, energy, and physical space, allowing you to pay only for what you use with automatic scalability.

The end of the "ice in the desert": why is the cloud winning over the local server?

Many managers still only look at their monthly cloud bill and compare it to the price of the last piece of hardware they bought. This is the classic mistake we call "incomplete comparison.".

Maintaining a local infrastructure is like buying your own power generator: you pay for the equipment, the installation, the fuel, the maintenance, and the technician. If your demand increases, the generator can't handle it; if demand decreases, you continue burning fuel unnecessarily.

In the cloud, the model changes to that of a "utility company": you turn on the tap and pay only for the liters you consume.

Where are the hidden costs of the physical server?

By maintaining local infrastructure, you incur costs that often don't appear in the IT budget:

"But can cloud bills be unpredictable?"

This is the most common objection from those who fear the public cloud model. The fear of a "surprise" at the end of the month prevents many companies from modernizing their ERP.

The strategy to avoid this is Financial Governance (FinOps). Modern solutions like Skyone Autosky solve this problem through transparent and predictable pricing, often in local currency, eliminating variable fees or hidden licenses. With autoscaling, the infrastructure adjusts minute by minute: it grows during peak periods and shrinks during idle periods, ensuring you never pay for a resource that isn't generating value.

Practical scenario: the cost of downtime

Imagine a supermarket chain expanding.

In the case of the Asun Supermarkets chain , the strategic migration to the cloud not only stabilized operations, but also reduced the time for critical processes (such as ICMS generation) from 8 to just 2 hours, an efficiency gain that translates directly into financial savings.

Cloud computing is an investment, not just an expense

The real question shouldn't just be "which one is the cheapest?", but rather "which model allows my company to grow without barriers?".

Local infrastructure is a glass ceiling. The cloud is a solid and scalable foundation that frees your experts to work on what really matters: the intelligence of your data and the competitive differentiation of your business.


Frequently asked questions about cloud costs:

  1. Does migrating to the cloud require rewriting my systems? Not necessarily. With "No-Code Migration" technology, you can move your legacy systems to the cloud while preserving the original business logic and reducing implementation risks.
  2. How does the cloud help with cybersecurity? It centralizes monitoring (SOC/SIEM 24x7) and automates daily backups, preventing catastrophic costs associated with data breaches or physical failures.
  3. Is the cloud secure for sensitive data? Yes, ISO 27001 certified platforms with Zero Trust architecture ensure that your data is more protected than on vulnerable local servers.