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    Red Hat OpenShift Kubernetes Engine

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    Deployed on AWS
    For the EMEA region, Red Hat® OpenShift® Kubernetes Engine provides you with the basic functionality of Red Hat OpenShift. It offers an enterprise-ready Kubernetes environment with an extensive compatibility matrix with many third-party software elements.
    4.3

    Overview

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    An enterprise-class Kubernetes production platform for running Linux containers in the EMEA region.

    Red Hat® OpenShift® Kubernetes Engine provides you with the core functionality of Red Hat OpenShift. It offers a core set of features from Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform, such as full access to an enterprise-ready Kubernetes environment and an extensive compatibility test matrix with many of the software elements that you might use in your datacenter.

    Red Hat OpenShift Kubernetes Engine lets you explore the benefits of Red Hat OpenShift in an entry-level solution. The core components of Red Hat Enterprise Linux® CoreOS, Kubernetes, and basic cluster services - all deployed using a fully automated installer - make up the base of every Red Hat OpenShift installation. This process is the foundation of the Red Hat OpenShift experience, which can automate the upgrade and management functions of the platform. Red Hat OpenShift Kubernetes Engine is built from the most innovative upstream open source projects, and supported by Red Hat.

    IMPORTANT: This marketplace listing is not meant for direct consumption by deploying a single virtual machine. Please follow the instructions in https://access.redhat.com/articles/6675791  and DO NOT create a Virtual Machine from this offering directly.

    Highlights

    • Red Hat OpenShift Kubernetes Engine provides you with commercial support, upgrades, patches, and increased security for Kubernetes and Kubernetes-native applications so you don't have to do it all yourself.
    • Easily update your clusters and let Red Hat OpenShift Kubernetes Engine automatically handle dependencies and the update process with over-the-air-updates.
    • Run and manage virtual machine (VM) workloads alongside container workloads by running VMs within containers side-by-side with other containers and serverless - all in one platform - with Red Hat OpenShift Virtualization.

    Details

    Delivery method

    Delivery option
    64-bit (x86) Amazon Machine Image (AMI)

    Latest version

    Operating system
    Rhel 9.4

    Deployed on AWS
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    Pricing

    Red Hat OpenShift Kubernetes Engine

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    Pricing is based on actual usage, with charges varying according to how much you consume. Subscriptions have no end date and may be canceled any time. Alternatively, you can pay upfront for a contract, which typically covers your anticipated usage for the contract duration. Any usage beyond contract will incur additional usage-based costs.
    Additional AWS infrastructure costs may apply. Use the AWS Pricing Calculator  to estimate your infrastructure costs.

    Usage costs (474)

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    • ...
    Dimension
    Cost/hour
    m5.large
    Recommended
    $0.082
    r6id.16xlarge
    $2.611
    c6a.4xlarge
    $0.653
    g4ad.2xlarge
    $0.326
    r5b.16xlarge
    $2.611
    m6idn.8xlarge
    $1.306
    i3.8xlarge
    $1.306
    x2iezn.8xlarge
    $1.306
    i3.large
    $0.082
    d2.4xlarge
    $0.653

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    All fees are non-refundable

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    Usage information

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    Delivery details

    64-bit (x86) Amazon Machine Image (AMI)

    Amazon Machine Image (AMI)

    An AMI is a virtual image that provides the information required to launch an instance. Amazon EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) instances are virtual servers on which you can run your applications and workloads, offering varying combinations of CPU, memory, storage, and networking resources. You can launch as many instances from as many different AMIs as you need.

    Additional details

    Usage instructions

    IMPORTANT: This marketplace listing is not meant for direct consumption by deploying a single virtual machine. Please follow the instructions in https://access.redhat.com/articles/6675791 . DO NOT create a Virtual Machine from this offering directly.

    RHCOS is supported only as a component of OpenShift Container Platform 9.6 for all OpenShift Container Platform machines. RHCOS is the only supported operating system for OpenShift Container Platform control plane, or master, machines. While RHCOS is the default operating system for all cluster machines, you can create compute machines, which are also known as worker machines, that use RHEL as their operating system. There are two general ways RHCOS is deployed in OpenShift Container Platform 9.6:

    1. If you install your cluster on infrastructure that the installation program provisions, RHCOS images are downloaded to the target platform during installation. Suitable Ignition config files, which control the RHCOS configuration, are also downloaded and used to deploy the machines.
    2. If you install your cluster on infrastructure that you manage, you must follow the installation documentation to obtain the RHCOS images, generate Ignition config files, and use the Ignition config files to provision your machines.
    3. For more information please see the Deploying RHCOS  documentation.

    Support

    Vendor support

    This offering is covered by the Premium tier of Red Hat Support and includes direct access to Red Hat support engineers during business hours and 24x7 access to support engineers for high severity issues. To enable Red Hat Support for this subscription and for all of your Red Hat on AWS Marketplace purchases, follow the instructions at https://aws.amazon.com/marketplace/pp/prodview-rl4nw5yvldol . Get answers quickly by opening a support case with us at

    AWS infrastructure support

    AWS Support is a one-on-one, fast-response support channel that is staffed 24x7x365 with experienced and technical support engineers. The service helps customers of all sizes and technical abilities to successfully utilize the products and features provided by Amazon Web Services.

    Product comparison

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    Customer reviews

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    Sentiment is AI generated from actual customer reviews on AWS and G2
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    Overview

     Info
    AI generated from product descriptions
    Enterprise-Ready Kubernetes Environment
    Provides core functionality of an enterprise-class Kubernetes production platform with full access to a production-ready Kubernetes environment for running Linux containers.
    Automated Cluster Installation and Management
    Deploys core components including Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS, Kubernetes, and basic cluster services using a fully automated installer with automated upgrade and management functions.
    Over-the-Air Update Capability
    Supports automatic cluster updates that handle dependencies and the update process without manual intervention.
    Container and Virtual Machine Workload Co-location
    Enables running and managing virtual machine workloads alongside container workloads within the same platform, allowing VMs to run within containers side-by-side with other containers and serverless applications.
    Extensive Third-Party Software Compatibility
    Includes an extensive compatibility test matrix with many third-party software elements and datacenter components.
    Security Framework Integration
    Enhanced SELinux policies, firewalld, and system-wide cryptographic standards for secure infrastructure
    Package Management and Updates
    Integration with RedHat Update Infrastructure (RHUI) across all AWS regions for RPM package installation and updates without subscription requirement
    Automatic Storage Expansion
    Root partition and filesystem automatically extends during boot when instance volume exceeds default 10 GiB capacity
    Web Stack Support
    Native support for Apache, Nginx, Node.js, PHP, Python, Ruby, and Java web application frameworks
    Database and DevOps Certification
    Certified environments for MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, MongoDB, Redis, and integration-ready with Jenkins, GitLab CI, and Ansible automation
    Security Framework
    SELinux and kernel-level protections with improved cryptography for workload protection and compliance requirement fulfillment
    Container Runtime Support
    Native containerized application support with Podman and Buildah tools for microservices deployment and application scaling
    Performance Optimization
    Advanced kernel optimizations and enhanced performance monitoring for efficient resource utilization across diverse workloads
    System Management Automation
    Automated system management tools with comprehensive API support and Red Hat Insights integration for proactive risk management and system optimization
    Modular Architecture
    Customizable modular architecture enabling environment personalization while maintaining compatibility with extensive application ecosystem

    Contract

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    Standard contract
    No

    Customer reviews

    Ratings and reviews

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    4.3
    39 ratings
    5 star
    4 star
    3 star
    2 star
    1 star
    59%
    38%
    3%
    0%
    0%
    6 AWS reviews
    |
    33 external reviews
    External reviews are from G2  and PeerSpot .
    Erika Rivera

    Cloud migrations have improved security workflows but documentation and support still need work

    Reviewed on Apr 29, 2026
    Review provided by PeerSpot

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Red Hat OpenShift  involves two cases: the first case is about the migration of QRadar and Red Hat OpenShift  for the cloud, which relates to the process of antivirus, XDR , and SOAR  and SIEM . The second case is the use for the migration in ARO, Microsoft Azure  Red Hat OpenShift, for the migration of OpenCTI from on-premise to the cloud.

    A quick specific example of how I used Red Hat OpenShift for one of those migrations is the particular process of the migration about the OpenCTI. The OpenCTI migration involved a process where we used Docker  for the OpenCTI to function correctly when implemented, which was the main challenge.

    I do not have anything else to add about my main use case or the migration processes with Red Hat OpenShift.

    What is most valuable?

    In my experience, the best feature Red Hat OpenShift offers is that the environment is easy to use. When I say environment needs, I mean that it is easy for the configuration and the management in the different environments. For example, when I use the API key, the configuration and connector, the environment provides easy visibility and allows me to watch the reports for the leadership in the company.

    Red Hat OpenShift has positively impacted my organization, and now we use it more in the QRadar SIEM  environment. However, in this case, IBM sold QRadar to Palo Alto, and our client changed the SIEM , so Red Hat OpenShift is not functional at this moment for QRadar.

    What needs improvement?

    Red Hat OpenShift can be improved by addressing any features, performance, or usability issues. In my view, the performance is very good, and the automatization of the new environment and new machine is fantastic because it is easier for my job in the company. My colleagues display information and the Docker  functionality is good.

    There are two small things I would suggest about the SOAR : the connection for the SOAR to send email and send communication to our colleagues and people in the company.

    If I could change or improve one thing about Red Hat OpenShift, it would be to provide more information on the web because the information is limited and I need to explore more. I would change this about Red Hat OpenShift because I have known this all year and need more investigation.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Red Hat OpenShift for about one year, more than one year ago.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Red Hat OpenShift is stable.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    In my view, Red Hat OpenShift's scalability is good, although I do not know for certain.

    How are customer service and support?

    The customer support for Red Hat OpenShift is bad because the support does not respond.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    I did not previously use a different solution before Red Hat OpenShift. However, before it, we used VMware.

    How was the initial setup?

    Before choosing Red Hat OpenShift, we evaluated other options, specifically VMware.

    What was our ROI?

    I have seen a return on investment from using Red Hat OpenShift because I save money since I do not need the server in my data center on-premise, and I save money in monthly payments for availability and accessibility in the data center.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    I cannot respond to the question about my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing because the cost is another area, specifically the area of accounting and finance.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    Before choosing Red Hat OpenShift, we evaluated other options, specifically VMware.

    What other advice do I have?

    My advice for others looking into using Red Hat OpenShift is to explore the tools, understand how Red Hat OpenShift migration to the cloud works, and recognize that the response and return on metric is efficient for good operation.

    That is all I would like to add about the features of Red Hat OpenShift. I choose seven out of ten because my use is not total. Perhaps it is interesting for the use, but our environment in the company is easier to use with VMware. I rate this product seven out of ten overall.

    I do not have any additional thoughts about Red Hat OpenShift.

    Ayman Abuqutriyah

    Platform has transformed our cloud into a secure, unified home for diverse modern applications

    Reviewed on Apr 29, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    I have been using Red Hat OpenShift  for more than six years.

    I implement Red Hat OpenShift  for our customers as we are a service provider, and we implement it in our cloud. We provide it as a service for our customers, and we deploy some of the applications that we have implemented in our company and for my personal use.

    I deployed and developed an audit application which runs all the compliance requirements for a company, including multiple platforms and multiple standards such as ISO and others, and NCA for Saudi Arabia, and any other standard can work on it. This is one example. I also created a personal application for a t-shirt integrated with AI where we can create an image and print it on a shirt and ship it to the customer. I implemented another application for waste management, which was totally developed and deployed by myself for my personal use and the waste management for one of our customers. Additionally, I had another application deployed for one of our customers, where my role was to deploy Red Hat OpenShift and to make sure their application is deployed and available. This is for bill invoicing and financial operations. For one of the hospitals, our customer, I deployed the application for monitoring diabetes patients. My role there was to deploy it and to make the application available, providing all the requirements, ingress, configuration, storage, and other things. These are examples of what I have done.

    Red Hat OpenShift by default is secure, more than native Kubernetes , as it has a limitation for the run as. The container by default does not run as root; this is one of the examples. The integration with ACS allows centralized policy deployment and enforcement, alongside great observability and monitoring. Red Hat OpenShift is actually enterprise-grade Kubernetes  with all the accessories and main features.

    What is most valuable?

    One of the best features of Red Hat OpenShift is that it has the catalog, the application catalog, and the operator hub, which allows us to deploy things easily and straightforward without going into a lot of hassles. This is one of the main things, in addition to having integration with ACM and ACS, where we can have the ability to manage multiple clusters and to secure them, deploy them, manage them, run GitOps and day-two operations, as well as upgrades and other functionality which is made easy using these tools. Red Hat OpenShift also provides virtualization capabilities, and I am currently working with Zain to make a project where we will convert F5 appliances to virtual machines and to manage them through Red Hat virtualization, OVE. Red Hat OpenShift is a unique platform because it provides the features for both worlds, containerization, and VMs at the same time, requiring you to learn one skillset in order to manage all of this at the same time.

    In the beginning, our cloud depended only on virtual machines, so I introduced this to our management to start to work with microservices and with containerization. This was adapted in our cloud, providing us the capability to sell more of these features and to reduce the hardware requirement by about thirty percent, following the trends of using containerization for all modern applications. In addition, it reduced the time to develop and to deploy a new application; all we need is using Jenkins  for CI/CD. Once we commit any code, it gets triggered, and it will implement the new container in a very flexible and easy way, within seconds. This decreased the time to market and increased agility, allowing us to capture new opportunities very fast.

    What needs improvement?

    There is perhaps one thing about the deployment of Red Hat OpenShift. Currently, there are two new ways to deploy Red Hat OpenShift, which are easier with assisted deployment and agent-based deployment. However, previously it needed a lot of requirements on the infrastructure side if we are using UPI, user-provided infrastructure. If the deployment of Red Hat OpenShift itself can be easier and more flexible, it would be great.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Red Hat OpenShift for more than six years.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Red Hat OpenShift is stable.

    It is great. Red Hat OpenShift can scale to thousands of nodes, allowing multiple clusters to be managed in different geolocations and managed by centralized advanced cluster management, ACM.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    Regarding scalability, Red Hat OpenShift has a lot of scalability capability, including about two thousand machines in one cluster and multiple cluster management, centralized management through ACM and ACS, which provides a very secure way to manage centrally all the features and to enforce policies.

    In the beginning, our cloud depended only on virtual machines, so I introduced this to our management to start to work with microservices and with containerization. This was adapted in our cloud, providing us the capability to sell more of these features and to reduce the hardware requirement by about thirty percent, following the trends of using containerization for all modern applications.

    How are customer service and support?

    The response time for customer support is excellent, and they go deep and can resolve things easily.

    The documentation and support that we get from Red Hat are very sufficient, and this differentiates between enterprise-grade Kubernetes and native Kubernetes or perhaps Kubernetes from other vendors.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    We used native Kubernetes before Red Hat OpenShift, actually, deploying it through kubeadm. The issue with Kubernetes is that it is just the engine; Red Hat has all the requirements to give you a complete solution. Red Hat OpenShift provides the complete ecosystem, all the integrations, and the tools which I mentioned before, which are already integrated and easy to be used. You do not need to grab open-source solutions for storage or other things, and you do not have to do a lot of customization, needing to comply with each version. Red Hat OpenShift is tested and vetted, making things easier to be deployed, supported, and managed, and it is more trustworthy.

    How was the initial setup?

    There is perhaps one thing about the deployment of Red Hat OpenShift. Currently, there are two new ways to deploy Red Hat OpenShift, which are easier with assisted deployment and agent-based deployment.

    What about the implementation team?

    We are a partner with Red Hat; we sell their services and licenses, and we do the implementation ourselves.

    What was our ROI?

    We did not measure our return on investment in a very accurate way, but as I mentioned, we could decrease the time needed to deploy any application, enabling us to capture new opportunities faster, go to market faster, and maintain the availability and security of all our applications.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    We work with Red Hat or our distributor in Saudi Arabia. We send our requirements as part of the RFP describing what we need, and we get the pricing from our distributor. There is an easy way to price the subscription of the support per CPU, per VM, so it is easy to be priced, but we depend on an official quote usually from our distributor.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    Red Hat OpenShift by default is secure, more than native Kubernetes, as it has a limitation for the run as. The container by default does not run as root; this is one of the examples. The integration with ACS allows centralized policy deployment and enforcement, alongside great observability and monitoring. Red Hat OpenShift is actually enterprise-grade Kubernetes with all the accessories and main features.

    What other advice do I have?

    Our go-to-market and our deployment for any application, the time is reduced perhaps by eight times. It is very fast because you have consistency for all deployed containers; it is not like a virtual machine where you have to deploy individually for each virtual machine or you have to copy code here and there. It takes seconds because the containers spin out very fast; they are very lightweight. The things that we used to do in days, now take a couple of minutes to be done. So, that is approximately the number—mostly it is reduced by eight.

    We are providing our cloud to our customers, so we are a service provider. We deploy Red Hat OpenShift in our cloud and host customers' applications through it. Some of our customers prefer Red Hat OpenShift on Azure  or on AWS , so we deploy it there when needed, but our main deliverable is through our cloud.

    We have our own cloud provided by our company, making us a local cloud provider. We are not a hyper integrator, nor a hyper-scaler. We provide it through our cloud and deployed a couple of customers on Azure ; this is what I recall.

    I would advise others looking into using Red Hat OpenShift to take the step and to go fast into it because it will save them a lot of money and provide them with all the features, flexibility, security, and others. I give this product a rating of ten out of ten.

    AlvaroFuentes

    Private AI agents have been deployed securely and integrate smoothly with observability tools

    Reviewed on Apr 23, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    I'm changing to AI, so I'm implementing platforms for agents, specifically for artificial intelligence and agentic platforms.

    It is to deploy agents in a sovereign and private tenant. Basically, when customers don't like to share their information with any cloud provider, they prefer to keep the information local. So they deploy their own private cloud, and most of them are using Red Hat OpenShift .

    What is most valuable?

    I find support for Kubernetes  and security are the most useful features in Red Hat OpenShift .

    What I appreciate from Red Hat OpenShift is the capacity to provide an integrated and secure environment that is more or less better than creating the environment from scratch or based on standard Kubernetes . Red Hat OpenShift provides a lot of features that help us to operate the platform in a very professional and efficient way, instead of using low-level tools provided with the open-source capacities. For us, it is a very practical environment in which we can quickly develop features—not using directly AI capacities from Red Hat OpenShift, but our own capacities, in a very integrated way.

    The main benefits Red Hat OpenShift provides for me as a final user include the capacity to integrate third-party tools and also the integration between observability, security, and monitoring capacities.

    What needs improvement?

    Red Hat OpenShift is very expensive. I am starting to evaluate the capacities specifically related to artificial intelligence. The suite also integrates a lot of open source, which is more or less aligned with my strategy that always tries to use open source. However, as far as I know, it's not so flexible using the components by themselves, but I don't really have firsthand experience. That's what I've been told by the people working with them. It's not so flexible, but you win in integration and lose a little in the capacity of flexibility or making your platform more flexible.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I've been working with Red Hat OpenShift for maybe one year.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    I rate the stability of Red Hat OpenShift as quite robust. I'm satisfied with it.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    From one to ten, I would rate the ability to scale as nine.

    How are customer service and support?

    I would also rate the technical support from Red Hat as nine.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    I no longer use VMware and Tanzu data solutions because I changed my profile and my department.

    How was the initial setup?

    For us, the initial setup for Red Hat OpenShift is complex. It's complex, but also powerful.

    What about the implementation team?

    In my case, I directly work with Red Hat for purchasing the license.

    What was our ROI?

    Overall, I would give Red Hat OpenShift a final mark of nine.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    As a competitor to Red Hat OpenShift, I think Rancher  may be a possibility, but it's very, very far from what Red Hat OpenShift provides. I don't really know any other commercial distribution of Kubernetes. The alternative would be to create the cluster by yourself, using the components or the open-source components, but it would be really, really complicated. Also, alternatives in cloud exist, using the Kubernetes services from cloud providers like Fargate or AKS. But I would rather prefer to create Red Hat OpenShift on top of the cloud instead of using it. It's more expensive, obviously, but we have good experiences.

    What other advice do I have?

    In terms of functionality, I'm working with Red Hat OpenShift in terms of infrastructure and monitoring, so in these capacities, we are very satisfied.

    I can recommend it to other users. Overall, I would give Red Hat OpenShift a final mark of nine.

    Which deployment model are you using for this solution?

    Private Cloud

    If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?

    RiteshWalia

    Modernization to secure microservices has improved uptime and observability for critical apps

    Reviewed on Jan 05, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Red Hat OpenShift  is that we had several security tools that we deployed to Red Hat OpenShift  platform, specifically when we were migrating our applications from monolithic architecture to microservices, and our OpenShift platform was using some of the AWS  VMs as master and worker nodes, so it was completely on AWS , and we actually set it up from scratch, setting up those projects to be used for our applications and then deploying them with Red Hat OpenShift version 4, which we started using five years back, as it was the latest at that point in time, and then we continued to operate and run our applications there.

    A quick, specific example of an application I deployed on Red Hat OpenShift is a banking-based application which we moved from a monolithic architecture to a microservices architecture, and we completely deployed it end-to-end, split into 10 plus microservices, and then it was deployed to Red Hat OpenShift platform 4.

    What is most valuable?

    The best features that Red Hat OpenShift offers in my experience include being a pre-assembled product where Red Hat actually makes choices for you, which for example, as a CloudOps Engineer, means I don't have to explicitly go into CLI because the web-based UI is simple and helpful for debugging, and they've integrated the logging of the application within Red Hat OpenShift. I really appreciate the automated updates, built-in observability comes with pre-configured Prometheus and Grafana  stack for monitoring our cluster health, and the native tooling it has such as Red Hat OpenShift GitOps, which is a Red Hat supported Argo CD, and the integration into clusters are based on role-based access control with security by default, where Red Hat OpenShift is quite secure out of the box, having those strict permissions and using Security Context  Constraints, and especially the immutable OS and Red Hat OpenShift virtualization, which is something that is really helpful.

    Red Hat OpenShift has positively impacted my organization primarily through observability, as for us, application uptime matters a lot when providing public-facing products consumed by customers, and hence, we're using that to keep refining our application and products through observability metrics and keeping pace with market trends, as we promised 99.99% uptime to our customers, and the observability in Red Hat OpenShift is really helping us a lot with that.

    What needs improvement?

    Areas where Red Hat OpenShift can be improved include the licensing being a bit complex and maybe expensive, as that is something in the hands of the organization's higher management, especially when those licensing agreements are done, and I think Red Hat OpenShift is quite resource-heavy because the control plane and default monitoring stack consume significant resources, meaning for small clusters, a large percentage of compute goes just to running Red Hat OpenShift itself, not our apps.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Red Hat OpenShift for close to six years across those different organizations.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Red Hat OpenShift is stable in my experience.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    Red Hat OpenShift's scalability is really good.

    How are customer service and support?

    Customer support is really good because so far in our case, we have always received a prompt response, and they have been really helpful to us. I would rate the customer support a 10 out of 10.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    We did not use any other solution before Red Hat OpenShift.

    How was the initial setup?

    Red Hat OpenShift is deployed in my organization on AWS.

    What was our ROI?

    We have saved a lot of time with Red Hat OpenShift.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing would suggest that it was more into a high cost, but then again, I'm an engineer, so this is taken care of by the higher management, and I don't have any definitive answer.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    We did not evaluate any other solution before choosing Red Hat OpenShift because we wanted to use a licensed product for Kubernetes  that has enterprise support.

    What other advice do I have?

    I would rate Red Hat OpenShift a 9 out of 10 overall. I choose a nine for Red Hat OpenShift because for such kind of tools, there is always room for improvement, as I already mentioned the things that can be improved in my previous answer. I would suggest that it's quite better if you're using Red Hat OpenShift for an enterprise solution, as it's really better to have the enterprise support which Red Hat OpenShift offers, and it's easy to use for Kubernetes-based applications.

    reviewer2382555

    Has supported container-based service hosting while slower support impacts resolution time

    Reviewed on Nov 12, 2025
    Review provided by PeerSpot

    What is our primary use case?

    Red Hat OpenShift  is used to host all services running on containers on specific ports for both production and non-production environments.

    Red Hat OpenShift  is utilized in the healthcare sector.

    What is most valuable?

    Red Hat OpenShift provides good value as a cloud service, comparable to other public clouds such as AWS  and Azure , but it functions as a private cloud rather than a public one.

    A smaller cloud running on containers enables easy deployment with the ability to scale up and scale down, and it can host multiple services on the same platform.

    What needs improvement?

    Red Hat OpenShift is currently running with VMware, and there are some issues on the storage side that are still being addressed.

    The support from Red Hat is rated around a six or seven in those kinds of cases.

    Support could improve with faster response times, as responses are currently quite slow.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    The team has been working with Red Hat OpenShift for over five years.

    How was the initial setup?

    The initial setup for Red Hat OpenShift is easy to deploy.

    What about the implementation team?

    There are approximately two resources working on the Red Hat OpenShift cluster for deployment.

    The DevOps engineer and the Red Hat OpenShift Linux engineer are the job roles required for deployment.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    There is no free open-source version available; a license must be purchased for Red Hat OpenShift.

    The pricing for Red Hat OpenShift is considered quite high.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    Red Hat OpenShift cannot be compared with other options for PaaS clouds because other private services have never been used.

    There is no current knowledge of other available options.

    What other advice do I have?

    I am not familiar with the mobile app platform for Android.

    I don't have experience with VMware or AWS  products at this time, although a team member may be working on the technical side.

    My focus is on the management side rather than the technical side.

    Microsoft tools are not being used.

    The team is focused on the Linux side for the private cloud for Red Hat OpenShift.

    I have minimal familiarity with Red Hat OpenShift. I don't have experience with Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation. The technical side of Red Hat OpenShift is handled by a team member. Management tools, help desk software, or ITSMs are not being used. The overall review rating for Red Hat OpenShift is seven out of ten.

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