The era of autonomous operations is no longer a roadmap item – it is in production. Microsoft’s Azure SRE Agent reached General Availability in March 2026. Amazon’s AWS DevOps Agent followed on March 31, 2026. For the first time, engineering and platform teams have two production-grade, cloud-native AI operations agents to evaluate side by side.
This is not a feature checklist. This analysis covers every dimension that matters to enterprise DevOps and SRE decision-makers: architecture, capabilities, integrations, autonomy controls, pricing, maturity, and strategic fit — benchmarked against the broader AIOps competitive landscape. All findings reflect the GA state of both products as of April 2026.
If you are evaluating either platform for production deployment, or determining which fits your cloud footprint and team workflows, this guide is built for that decision.
Market Context
Modern cloud infrastructure has outgrown human-speed incident management. Microservices sprawl, multi-cloud dependencies, and 24×7 uptime demands have rendered alert-driven on-call rotations unsustainable. The industry’s response: AI agents that investigate, correlate, and remediate autonomously — at machine speed.
The global AIOps platform market was valued at $14.6B in 2024 and is projected to reach $36.1B by 2030, at a 15.2% CAGR (Grand View Research). Enterprise adoption of AI-powered monitoring grew from 42% to 54% between 2024 and 2025 alone, driven by microservices generating tenfold more telemetry than monolithic stacks (Mordor Intelligence).
AIOps Market Growth (2024–2030)
Source: Grand View Research — AIOps Platform Market Report 2024–2030 | CAGR: 15.2%
Both cloud giants identified this inflection point simultaneously. Microsoft announced Azure SRE Agent at Build 2025 and reached General Availability by March 2026. Amazon launched AWS DevOps Agent at re:Invent 2025, reaching General Availability on March 31, 2026. These are not incremental feature additions. They represent a new category of autonomous operations tooling for enterprise infrastructure teams.
Product Overview & Positioning
Two cloud giants, one converging mission; but meaningfully different philosophies. Microsoft leans into the SRE discipline with maturity-model language that resonates with platform engineering teams. Amazon leads with ‘frontier agent’ autonomy, signalling a product designed to operate independently for hours or even days.
Azure SRE Agent
“Your AI teammate for operations”
STATUS: Generally Available (GA)
Announced: Build 2025 (May)
Billing started: September 1, 2025
GA Date: March 2026
Primary Focus: Azure-native SRE
AI Engine: Azure OpenAI + AI Foundry
Portal: sre.azure.com
AWS DevOps Agent
“A frontier agent that resolves & prevents incidents”
STATUS: Generally Available (GA)
Announced: re:Invent 2025 (Dec 2)
GA Date: March 31, 2026
Billing starts: April 10, 2026
Primary Focus: AWS + Azure + Multi-cloud + On-prem
AI Engine: Amazon Bedrock (frontier)
Regions: 6 regions: US, EU, AP
Architecture Overview
Understanding the underlying architecture reveals capability ceilings, integration patterns, and long-term product trajectories. The two products take fundamentally different structural approaches.
Azure SRE Agent — Dual-Mode Architecture
AWS DevOps Agent — Topology-Graph Architecture
Capabilities Comparison
The table below maps each operational capability side by side. Where one product holds a meaningful advantage, it is noted in the ‘Recommendations’ section.
Integrations & Connectivity
The integration ecosystem is often the deciding factor in enterprise adoption. Both agents support MCP (Model Context Protocol) for extensibility, but their native integration catalogs reflect different strategic priorities. Azure leads on Microsoft-ecosystem depth. AWS leads on third-party observability breadth: Datadog, Dynatrace, New Relic, and Splunk are all native integrations, not MCP workarounds.
Autonomy & Human-in-the-Loop Controls
How much autonomy to grant an AI operations agent is one of the most consequential decisions in enterprise adoption. Both products take a graduated approach but differ in how they structure and label the autonomy spectrum.
Azure SRE Agent — Full Configurable Autonomy Spectrum
Review Mode (Supervised/Default)
The agent investigates, proposes a fix, and waits for your explicit approval before executing any remediation action.
Best for: Production systems, critical infrastructure, and security alerts.
Autonomous Mode
The agent investigates and executes approved actions immediately, reporting what it did afterward.
Best for: Non-production/staging environments and routine, trusted tasks.
AWS DevOps Agent — Investigative Focus (Preview)
At GA, AWS DevOps Agent moves beyond recommendation-only operation. The agent produces detailed mitigation plans with agent-ready specifications and — working with tools such as Kiro and Claude Code — generates validated code-level fixes that are applied directly back into the system. Operators retain the ability to steer active investigations via conversational chat. The autonomy model is maturing rapidly, with each release expanding the scope of unassisted execution.
For enterprises with strict change management requirements, both products support human-in-the-loop checkpoints. The practical difference is that Azure SRE Agent makes this a named, configurable mode, while AWS DevOps Agent embeds operator steering as a continuous option throughout the investigation lifecycle.
Pricing & Commercial Model
Both products now carry production pricing. Azure SRE Agent uses a dual-component AAU billing model (baseline + active). AWS DevOps Agent uses pure active-time billing at $0.0083 per agent-second — no idle baseline charge — with a 2-month free trial for new customers and monthly credits for AWS Support plan holders. Billing starts April 10, 2026.
Azure SRE Agent — AAU Billing
- Billing UnitAzure Agent Unit (AAU)
- Always-On Baseline4 AAU / hour (continuous)
- Active Task Rate0.25 AAU / second
- Estimated Unit Price$0.10 per AAU
- Monthly Baseline / Agent~$292 / month
- Low-Activity (1 agent)~$322 / month
- High-Activity (5 agents)~$6,110 / month
- Free TierNone
- Billing StartedSeptember 1, 2025
AWS DevOps Agent — Active-Time Billing (GA)
- StatusGenerally Available
- Billing ModelPay per agent-second
- Rate$0.0083 / agent-second
- Idle / Baseline Cost$0 — no idle charge
- Free Trial2 months for new customers
- Business Support+ Credit30% of AWS Support spend
- Enterprise Support Credit75% of AWS Support spend
- Unified Ops Credit100% of AWS Support spend
- Example (10 inv. x 8 min)~$39.84 / month
- Billing Start DateApril 10, 2026
Maturity & Enterprise Readiness
As of April 2026, both products are Generally Available and carry production SLAs. The maturity gap that existed during the preview period has narrowed considerably. Azure SRE Agent has a longer GA track record and broader compliance documentation at this point. AWS DevOps Agent’s GA launch on March 31, 2026 brings six-region availability, enterprise security features, customer managed keys, and full compliance program eligibility.
GA Customer Results: AWS DevOps Agent
Investigation time reduced from ~2 hours to 28 minutes — 77% MTTR improvement
~75% investigation time reduction, from 1–2 hours to 20–30 minutes
Live design partner; integrated with Splunk across multi-cloud and on-premises
Integrated into automated incident response with high-severity CloudWatch alarms
Source: AWS GA announcement, March 31, 2026.
Security, Governance & Compliance
Both products are built on enterprise-grade AI platforms — Azure OpenAI Service and Amazon Bedrock respectively — with strong data handling commitments. For regulated-industry procurement, both are now viable choices. The final differentiator on security will be your existing cloud governance posture and toolchain.
Azure SRE Agent
Microsoft explicitly states: ‘Azure SRE Agent does not use your data to train AI models.’ It inherits the full Azure platform compliance portfolio (SOC 2, ISO 27001, GDPR, HIPAA). Default Reader mode minimizes blast radius. RBAC-aligned user roles.
AWS DevOps Agent
AWS DevOps Agent now supports customer managed keys, direct Okta and Microsoft Entra ID (IdP) integration for operator portal access, and Private MCP (no confidential traffic routes over the internet). As a GA service, it is in scope under AWS compliance programs. AWS IAM governs all access controls — a mature, well-understood enterprise control plane.
Competitive Landscape
Neither tool operates in isolation. A mature AIOps ecosystem exists, with several established players holding meaningful advantages in specific dimensions. The table below positions Azure SRE Agent and AWS DevOps Agent against the broader market.
* PagerDuty annual commitment required. Source: PagerDuty published pricing | Dynatrace ARR $1.97B (Dec 2025): Dynatrace IR
Both Azure SRE Agent and AWS DevOps Agent are now formidable competitors to purpose-built AIOps platforms. Dynatrace Davis AI retains an edge in depth and maturity for complex distributed enterprise environments, built on seven-plus years of production refinement. Datadog Bits AI remains the natural choice for teams already standardised on Datadog’s observability stack.
For enterprises already running Dynatrace or Datadog, the relevant question is not whether to adopt AI-driven operations — it is whether a cloud-native agent adds sufficient incremental value to justify additional toolchain complexity and operational overhead.
Decision Framework & Recommendations
Both products are now GA. The decision is no longer about readiness – it is about fit. The following criteria are intended to guide that evaluation based on cloud footprint, observability stack, team workflows, and commercial model.
Choose Azure SRE Agent if…
- Your production workloads run primarily on Azure
- You are deeply embedded in the Microsoft ecosystem (Teams, Outlook, Azure DevOps, PagerDuty)
- Eliminating toil from scheduled, recurring operational tasks (daily health reports, weekly trend analysis) is a priority
- You need the Python Code Interpreter for complex ad-hoc analysis and reporting through natural language
- You want domain-specific subagents with full customisation via the Plugin Marketplace
- Your incident management discipline relies on the SRE methodology — SLOs, error budgets, runbook-driven workflows
- Data sovereignty and an explicit no-training commitment are non-negotiable for your compliance team
Choose AWS DevOps Agent if…
- Your primary workloads run on AWS with Datadog, Dynatrace, New Relic, Splunk, or Grafana as your observability stack
- You operate in a genuine multi-cloud environment spanning AWS and Azure — the GA native Azure workload investigation support makes AWS DevOps Agent uniquely suited here
- Your applications span AWS and on-premises infrastructure — native on-prem support via MCP is a GA differentiator
- AWS Support escalation with pre-loaded investigation context is operationally valuable for your team
- GitLab CI/CD is your primary pipeline tool (native integration at GA)
- Code-level investigation, bug detection, and automated code fix generation (Code Indexing + Kiro/Claude Code) are priorities
- You have an AWS Support plan — credits (30%–100% of Support spend) can substantially offset or eliminate DevOps Agent costs
- You need localization for global teams operating in non-English environments
Hybrid Strategy — Recommended for Large Enterprises
For large enterprises running significant workloads on both Azure and AWS, a purposeful hybrid deployment warrants serious consideration over selecting a single platform.
- Deploy Azure SRE Agent for Azure workloads — leverage its SRE-discipline design, scheduled tasks, Code Interpreter, and deep Microsoft ecosystem connectivity
- Deploy AWS DevOps Agent for AWS and multi-cloud workloads — leverage native Azure investigation, on-prem support, code indexing, and superior third-party observability integrations
- Use PagerDuty or a neutral incident platform as the cross-cloud coordination layer — both agents integrate natively with PagerDuty at GA
- Standardize on Datadog or Dynatrace as the cross-cloud observability backbone — both agents integrate natively with these platforms
- Account for the cost asymmetry: Azure SRE Agent carries a ~$292+/mo baseline regardless of activity; AWS DevOps Agent is pure active-time at $0.0083/sec with AWS Support credits potentially zeroing the cost
Conclusion
As of early April 2026, both Azure SRE Agent and AWS DevOps Agent are Generally Available, production-grade, and enterprise-ready. The preview-era maturity gap has closed. These are no longer experimental tools — they are deployable operations platforms with documented customer outcomes and production SLAs.
Azure SRE Agent still leads on:
Scheduled recurring task automation, Python Code Interpreter for ad-hoc analysis, the Plugin Marketplace ecosystem, SRE-discipline design language, a longer GA track record, and deep Azure-centric integration.
AWS DevOps Agent leads on:
Native integrations with all major observability platforms — Datadog, Dynatrace, New Relic, Splunk, and Grafana — true multi-cloud and on-premises reach including native Azure workload investigation, Code Indexing with automated fix generation, a dedicated Triage Agent, pure active-time pricing with no idle baseline, AWS Support credits, and localisation for global teams. Customer-reported outcomes include up to 75% MTTR reduction, 80% faster investigations, and 94% root cause accuracy.
Both products are now formidable competitors to purpose-built AIOps platforms like Dynatrace Davis AI and Datadog Bits AI. For enterprises already running these platforms, the question is not whether to adopt AI ops — it is whether a cloud-native agent adds enough incremental value to justify additional toolchain complexity.
The decision is now entirely a question of fit: your cloud footprint, observability stack, team workflows, and budget model. There is no longer a technical or maturity-based reason to defer evaluation. Instrument your guardrails, define your autonomy thresholds, and begin deployment.
References & Sources
All statistical claims, pricing estimates, and market data include source links below. Verify with current vendor documentation before procurement decisions.
- Azure SRE Agent Official Documentation
- Azure SRE Agent — Microsoft Learn
- Azure SRE Agent Pricing Page
- Azure SRE Agent Billing Announcement (Sept 2025)
- Microsoft Billing Examples (GitHub Docs)
- AWS DevOps Agent Official Documentation
- AWS DevOps Agent GA Announcement (March 31, 2026)
- AWS DevOps Agent GA — What’s New
- AWS DevOps Agent Pricing Page
- AWS Frontier Agents Blog — VP Swami Sivasubramanian
- AWS DevOps Agent Migration Guide (Preview to GA)
- Grand View Research — AIOps Platform Market Report
- Mordor Intelligence — AIOps Market 2026
- Dynatrace Investor Relations (ARR data)
- PagerDuty Published Pricing
Analysis current as of April 3, 2026. AWS DevOps Agent reached GA on March 31, 2026. Verify with current official documentation before procurement decisions.