Azure subscription and service limits, quotas, and constraints
This document lists some of the most common Microsoft Azure limits, which are also sometimes called quotas.
To learn more about Azure pricing, see Azure pricing overview. There, you can estimate your costs by using the pricing calculator. You also can go to the pricing details page for a particular service, for example, Windows VMs. For tips to help manage your costs, see Prevent unexpected costs with Azure billing and cost management.
Managing limits
Note
Some services have adjustable limits.
When the limit can be adjusted, the tables include Default limit and Maximum limit headers. The limit can be raised above the default limit but not above the maximum limit. Some services with adjustable limits use different headers with information about adjusting the limit.
When a service doesn't have adjustable limits, the following tables use the header Limit without any additional information about adjusting the limit. In those cases, the default and the maximum limits are the same.
If you want to raise the limit or quota above the default limit, open an online customer support request at no charge.
The terms soft limit and hard limit often are used informally to describe the current, adjustable limit (soft limit) and the maximum limit (hard limit). If a limit isn't adjustable, there won't be a soft limit, only a hard limit.
Free Trial subscriptions aren't eligible for limit or quota increases. If you have a Free Trial subscription, you can upgrade to a Pay-As-You-Go subscription. For more information, see Upgrade your Azure Free Trial subscription to a Pay-As-You-Go subscription and the Free Trial subscription FAQ.
Some limits are managed at a regional level.
Let's use vCPU quotas as an example. To request a quota increase with support for vCPUs, you must decide how many vCPUs you want to use in which regions. You then request an increase in vCPU quotas for the amounts and regions that you want. If you need to use 30 vCPUs in West Europe to run your application there, you specifically request 30 vCPUs in West Europe. Your vCPU quota isn't increased in any other region--only West Europe has the 30-vCPU quota.
As a result, decide what your quotas must be for your workload in any one region. Then request that amount in each region into which you want to deploy. For help in how to determine your current quotas for specific regions, see Resolve errors for resource quotas.
General limits
For limits on resource names, see Naming rules and restrictions for Azure resources.
For information about Resource Manager API read and write limits, see Throttling Resource Manager requests.
Management group limits
The following limits apply to management groups.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Management groups per Microsoft Entra tenant | 10,000 |
Subscriptions per management group | Unlimited. |
Levels of management group hierarchy | Root level plus 6 levels1 |
Direct parent management group per management group | One |
Management group level deployments per location | 8002 |
Locations of Management group level deployments | 10 |
1The 6 levels don't include the subscription level.
2If you reach the limit of 800 deployments, delete deployments from the history that are no longer needed. To delete management group level deployments, use Remove-AzManagementGroupDeployment or az deployment mg delete.
Subscription limits
The following limits apply when you use Azure Resource Manager and Azure resource groups.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Azure subscriptions associated with a Microsoft Entra tenant | Unlimited |
Coadministrators per subscription | Unlimited |
Resource groups per subscription | 980 |
Azure Resource Manager API request size | 4,194,304 bytes |
Tags per subscription1 | 50 |
Unique tag calculations per subscription2 | 80,000 |
Subscription-level deployments per location | 8003 |
Locations of Subscription-level deployments | 10 |
1You can apply up to 50 tags directly to a subscription. Within the subscription, each resource or resource group is also limited to 50 tags. However, the subscription can contain an unlimited number of tags that are dispersed across resources and resource groups.
2Resource Manager returns a list of tag name and values in the subscription only when the number of unique tags is 80,000 or less. A unique tag is defined by the combination of resource ID, tag name, and tag value. For example, two resources with the same tag name and value would be calculated as two unique tags. You still can find a resource by tag when the number exceeds 80,000.
3Deployments are automatically deleted from the history as you near the limit. For more information, see Automatic deletions from deployment history.
Resource group limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Resources per resource group | Resources aren't limited by resource group. Instead, they're limited by resource type in a resource group. See next row. |
Resources per resource group, per resource type | 800 - Some resource types can exceed the 800 limit. See Resources not limited to 800 instances per resource group. |
Deployments per resource group in the deployment history | 8001 |
Resources per deployment | 800 |
Management locks per unique scope | 20 |
Number of tags per resource or resource group | 50 |
Tag key length | 512 |
Tag value length | 256 |
1Deployments are automatically deleted from the history as you near the limit. Deleting an entry from the deployment history doesn't affect the deployed resources. For more information, see Automatic deletions from deployment history.
Template limits
Value | Limit |
---|---|
Parameters | 256 |
Variables | 256 |
Resources (including copy count) | 800 |
Outputs | 64 |
Template expression | 24,576 chars |
Resources in exported templates | 200 |
Template size | 4 MB |
Resource definition size | 1 MB |
Parameter file size | 4 MB |
You can exceed some template limits by using a nested template. For more information, see Use linked templates when you deploy Azure resources. To reduce the number of parameters, variables, or outputs, you can combine several values into an object. For more information, see Objects as parameters.
You may get an error with a template or parameter file of less than 4 MB, if the total size of the request is too large. For more information about how to simplify your template to avoid a large request, see Resolve errors for job size exceeded.
Microsoft Entra ID limits
Here are the usage constraints and other service limits for the Microsoft Entra service.
Category | Limit |
---|---|
Tenants | |
Domains | |
Resources |
|
Schema extensions |
|
Applications |
|
Application manifest | A maximum of 1,200 entries can be added to the application manifest. See more limits in Validation differences by supported account types. |
Groups |
At this time, the following scenarios are supported with nested groups:
The following scenarios are not supported with nested groups:
|
Application Proxy |
|
Access Panel | There's no limit to the number of applications per user that can be displayed in the Access Panel, regardless of the number of assigned licenses. |
Reports | A maximum of 1,000 rows can be viewed or downloaded in any report. Any other data is truncated. |
Administrative units |
|
Microsoft Entra roles and permissions |
|
Conditional Access Policies | A maximum of 195 policies can be created in a single Microsoft Entra organization (tenant). |
Terms of use | You can add no more than 40 terms to a single Microsoft Entra organization (tenant). |
Multitenant organizations |
|
API Center limits
Resource | Free plan1 | Standard plan2 |
---|---|---|
Maximum number of APIs | 2003 | 10,000 |
Maximum number of versions per API | 5 | 100 |
Maximum number of definitions per version | 5 | 5 |
Maximum number of deployments per API | 10 | 10 |
Maximum number of environments | 20 | 20 |
Maximum number of workspaces | 1 (Default) | 1 (Default) |
Maximum number of custom metadata properties per entity4 | 10 | 20 |
Maximum number of child properties in custom metadata property of type "object" | 10 | 10 |
Maximum requests per minute (data plane) | 3,000 | 6,000 |
Maximum number of API definitions linted per 4 hours | 10 | 100 |
Maximum number of linked API sources5 | 1 | 3 |
1 Free plan provided for 90 days, then service is soft-deleted.
2 To increase a limit in the Standard plan, contact support.
3 In the Free plan, use of full service features including API analysis and access through the data plane API is limited to 5 APIs.
4 Custom metadata properties assigned to APIs, deployments, and environments.
5 Sources such as linked API Management instances. In the Free plan, synchronization from a linked API source is limited to 200 APIs and 5 API definitions.
API Management limits
This section provides information about limits that apply to Azure API Management instances in different service tiers, including the following:
- API Management classic tiers
- API Management v2 tiers
- API Management workspaces
- Developer portal in API Management v2 tiers
Limits - API Management classic tiers
For certain API Management resources, limits are set only in the Consumption tier; in other API Management classic tiers, where indicated, these resources are unlimited. However, your practical upper limit depends on service configuration including pricing tier, service capacity, number of scale units, policy configuration, API definitions and types, number of concurrent requests, and other factors.
To request a limit increase, create a support request from the Azure portal. For more information, see Azure support plans.
Resource | Consumption | Developer | Basic | Standard | Premium |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maximum number of scale units | N/A (automatic scaling) | 1 | 2 | 4 | 31 per region |
Cache size (per unit) | External only | 10 MiB | 50 MiB | 1 GiB | 5 GiB |
Concurrent back-end connections1 per HTTP authority | Unlimited | 1,024 | 2,048 per unit | 2,048 per unit | 2,048 per unit |
Maximum cached response size | 2 MiB | 2 MiB | 2 MiB | 2 MiB | 2 MiB |
Maximum policy document size | 16 KiB | 256 KiB | 256 KiB | 256 KiB | 256 KiB |
Maximum custom gateway domains per service instance | N/A | 20 | N/A | N/A | 20 |
Maximum number of CA certificates per service instance | N/A | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Maximum number of service instances per Azure subscription | 20 | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Maximum number of subscriptions per service instance | 500 | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Maximum number of client certificates per service instance | 50 | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Maximum number of APIs per service instance | 50 | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Maximum number of API operations per service instance | 1,000 | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Maximum total request duration | 30 seconds | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Maximum request payload size | 1 GiB | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Maximum buffered payload size | 2 MiB | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Maximum request/response payload size in diagnostic logs | 8,192 bytes | 8,192 bytes | 8,192 bytes | 8,192 bytes | 8,192 bytes |
Maximum request URL size2 | 16,384 bytes | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Maximum character length of URL path segment | 1,024 | 1,024 | 1,024 | 1,024 | 1,024 |
Maximum character length of named value | 4,096 | 4,096 | 4,096 | 4,096 | 4,096 |
Maximum size of API schema used by validation policy | 4 MB | 4 MB | 4 MB | 4 MB | 4 MB |
Maximum number of schemas | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
Maximum size of request or response body in validate-content policy | 100 KiB | 100 KiB | 100 KiB | 100 KiB | 100 KiB |
Maximum number of self-hosted gateways3 | N/A | 25 | N/A | N/A | 25 |
Maximum number of active WebSocket connections per unit4 | N/A | 2,500 | 5,000 | 5,000 | 5,000 |
Maximum number of tags supported by an API Management resource | 15 | 15 | 15 | 15 | 15 |
Maximum number of credential providers per service instance | 1,000 | 1,000 | 1,000 | 1,000 | 1,000 |
Maximum number of connections per credential provider | 10,000 | 10,000 | 10,000 | 10,000 | 10,000 |
Maximum number of access policies per connection | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of authorization requests per minute per connection | 250 | 250 | 250 | 250 | 250 |
Maximum number of workspaces per service instance | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 100 |
1 Connections are pooled and reused unless explicitly closed by the backend.
2 Includes an up to 2048-bytes long query string.
3 The number of nodes (or replicas) associated with a self-hosted gateway resource is unlimited in the Premium tier and capped at a single node in the Developer tier.
4 Up to a maximum of 60,000 connections per service instance.
Limits - API Management v2 tiers
To request a limit increase, create a support request from the Azure portal. For more information, see Azure support plans.
Resource | Basic v2 | Standard v2 |
---|---|---|
Maximum number of scale units | 10 | 10 |
Maximum cache size per service instance | 250 MB | 1 GB |
Maximum number of APIs per service instance | 150 | 500 |
Maximum number of API operations per service instance | 3,000 | 10,000 |
Maximum number of subscriptions per service instance | 500 | 2,000 |
Maximum number of products per service instance | 50 | 200 |
Maximum number of users per service instance | 300 | 2,000 |
Maximum number of groups per service instance | 20 | 100 |
Maximum number of authorization servers per service instance | 10 | 500 |
Maximum number of policy fragments per service instance | 50 | 50 |
Maximum number of OpenID Connect providers per service instance | 10 | 10 |
Maximum number of certificates per service instance | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of backends per service instance | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of caches per service instance | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of named values per service instance | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of loggers per service instance | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of schemas per service instance | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of schemas per API | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of tags per service instance | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of tags per API | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of version sets per service instance | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of releases per API | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of operations per API | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of GraphQL resolvers per service instance | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of GraphQL resolvers per API | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of APIs per product | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of APIs per subscription | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of products per subscription | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of groups per product | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of tags per product | 100 | 100 |
Concurrent back-end connections1 per HTTP authority | 2,048 | 2,048 |
Maximum cached response size | 2 MiB | 2 MiB |
Maximum policy document size | 256 KiB | 256 KiB |
Maximum request payload size | 1 GiB | 1 GiB |
Maximum buffered payload size | 2 MiB | 2 MiB |
Maximum request/response payload size in diagnostic logs | 8,192 bytes | 8,192 bytes |
Maximum request URL size2 | 16,384 bytes | 16,384 bytes |
Maximum length of URL path segment | 1,024 characters | 1,024 characters |
Maximum character length of named value | 4,096 characters | 4,096 characters |
Maximum size of request or response body in validate-content policy | 100 KiB | 100 KiB |
Maximum size of API schema used by validation policy | 4 MB | 4 MB |
Maximum number of active WebSocket connections per unit3 | 5,000 | 5,000 |
1 Connections are pooled and reused unless explicitly closed by the backend.
2 Includes an up to 2048-bytes long query string.
3 Up to a maximum of 60,000 connections per service instance.
Limits - API Management workspaces
The following are resource limits per workspace in Azure API Management:
Resource | Workspace - Premium tier |
---|---|
Maximum number of workspaces per instance | 100 |
Maximum number of scale units per premium workspace gateway | 12 |
Maximum number of APIs (including versions and revisions) | 200 |
Maximum number of API operations | 5,000 |
Maximum number of operations per API | 100 |
Maximum number of releases per API | 100 |
Maximum number of schemas per API | 100 |
Maximum number of subscriptions per API | 200 |
Maximum number of tags per API | 100 |
Maximum number of backends | 200 |
Maximum number of certificates | 200 |
Maximum number of groups | 50 |
Maximum number of loggers | 50 |
Maximum number of named values | 200 |
Maximum number of policy fragments | 50 |
Maximum number of products | 100 |
Maximum number of APIs per product | 200 |
Maximum number of groups per product | 200 |
Maximum number of subscriptions per product | 1,000 |
Maximum number of tags per product | 50 |
Maximum number of schemas | 500 |
Maximum number of subscriptions | 5,000 |
Maximum number of tags | 200 |
Maximum number of groups per user | 200 |
Maximum number of version sets | 50 |
Limits - Developer portal in API Management v2 tiers
Item | Basic v2 | Standard v2 |
---|---|---|
Maximum number of media files to upload | 15 | 15 |
Maximum size of a media file | 500 KB | 500 KB |
Maximum number of pages | 30 | 50 |
Maximum number of widgets1 | 30 | 50 |
Maximum size of metadata per page | 350 KB | 350 KB |
Maximum size of metadata per widget1 | 350 KB | 350 KB |
Maximum number of client requests per minute | 200 | 200 |
1 Limit for built-in widgets such as text, images, or APIs list. Currently, custom widgets and custom HTML code widgets aren't supported in the v2 tiers.
App Service limits
Resource | Free | Shared | Basic | Standard | Premium (v1-v3) | Isolated |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Web, mobile, or API apps per Azure App Service plan1 | 10 | 100 | Unlimited2 | Unlimited2 | Unlimited2 | Unlimited2 |
App Service plan | 10 per region | 10 per resource group | 100 per resource group | 100 per resource group | 100 per resource group | 100 per resource group |
Compute instance type | Shared | Shared | Dedicated3 | Dedicated3 | Dedicated3 | Dedicated3 |
Scale out (maximum instances) | 1 shared | 1 shared | 3 dedicated3 | 10 dedicated3 | 20 dedicated for v1; 30 dedicated for v2 and v3.3 | 100 dedicated4 |
Storage5 | 1 GB5 | 1 GB5 | 10 GB5 | 50 GB5 | 250 GB5 | 1 TB12 The available storage quota is 999 GB. |
CPU time (5 minutes)6 | 3 minutes | 3 minutes | Unlimited, pay at standard rates | Unlimited, pay at standard rates | Unlimited, pay at standard rates | Unlimited, pay at standard rates |
CPU time (day)6 | 60 minutes | 240 minutes | Unlimited, pay at standard rates | Unlimited, pay at standard rates | Unlimited, pay at standard rates | Unlimited, pay at standard rates |
Memory (1 hour) | 1,024 MB per App Service plan | 1,024 MB per app | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Bandwidth | 165 MB | Unlimited, data transfer rates apply | Unlimited, data transfer rates apply | Unlimited, data transfer rates apply | Unlimited, data transfer rates apply | Unlimited, data transfer rates apply |
Application architecture | 32-bit | 32-bit | 32-bit/64-bit | 32-bit/64-bit | 32-bit/64-bit | 32-bit/64-bit |
WebSockets per instance (Windows)7 | 5 | 35 | 350 | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
WebSockets per instance (Linux)7 | 5 | N/A | ~50K | ~50K | ~50K | ~50K |
Outbound IP connections per instance | 600 | 600 | Depends on instance size8 | Depends on instance size8 | Depends on instance size8 | 16,000 |
Concurrent debugger connections per application | 1 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
App Service Certificates per subscription | Not supported | Not supported | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Custom domains per app | 0 (azurewebsites.net subdomain only) | 500 | 500 | 500 | 500 | 500 |
Custom domain SSL support | Not supported, wildcard certificate for *.azurewebsites.net available by default | Not supported, wildcard certificate for *.azurewebsites.net available by default | Unlimited SNI SSL connections | Unlimited SNI SSL and 1 IP SSL connections included | Unlimited SNI SSL and 1 IP SSL connections included | Unlimited SNI SSL and 1 IP SSL connections included |
Hybrid connections | 5 per plan | 25 per plan | 220 per app | 220 per app | ||
Virtual Network Integration | X | X | X | X | ||
Private Endpoints | 100 per app | 100 per app | 100 per app | |||
Integrated load balancer | X | X | X | X | X9 | |
Access restrictions | 512 rules per app | 512 rules per app | 512 rules per app | 512 rules per app | 512 rules per app | 512 rules per app |
Always On | X | X | X | X | ||
Scheduled backups | Scheduled backups every 2 hours, a maximum of 12 backups per day (manual + scheduled | Scheduled backups every 2 hours, a maximum of 12 backups per day (manual + scheduled) | Scheduled backups every hour, a maximum of 50 backups per day (manual + scheduled) | Scheduled backups every hour, a maximum of 50 backups per day (manual + scheduled) | ||
Autoscale | X | X | X | |||
WebJobs10 | X | X | X | X | X | X |
Endpoint monitoring | X | X | X | X | ||
Staging slots per app | 5 | 20 | 20 | |||
Testing in Production | X | X | X | |||
Diagnostic Logs | X | X | X | X | X | X |
Kudu | X | X | X | X | X | X |
Authentication and Authorization | X | X | X | X | X | X |
App Service Managed Certificates11 | X | X | X | X | ||
SLA | 99.95% | 99.95% | 99.95% | 99.95% |
1 Apps and storage quotas are per App Service plan unless noted otherwise.
2 The actual number of apps that you can host on these machines depends on the activity of the apps, the size of the machine instances, and the corresponding resource utilization.
3 Dedicated instances can be of different sizes. For more information, see App Service pricing.
4 More are allowed upon request.
5 The storage limit is the total content size across all apps in the same App service plan. The total content size of all apps across all App service plans in a single resource group and region cannot exceed 500 GB. The file system quota for App Service hosted apps is determined by the aggregate of App Service plans created in a region and resource group.
6 These resources are constrained by physical resources on the dedicated instances (the instance size and the number of instances).
7If you scale a Windows app in the Basic tier to two instances, you have 350 concurrent connections for each of the two instances. For Windows apps on Standard tier and above, there are no theoretical limits to WebSockets, but other factors can limit the number of WebSockets. For example, maximum concurrent requests allowed (defined by maxConcurrentRequestsPerCpu
) are: 7,500 per small VM, 15,000 per medium VM (7,500 x 2 cores), and 75,000 per large VM (18,750 x 4 cores). Linux apps are limited 5 concurrent WebSocket connections on Free SKU and ~50k concurrent WebSocket connections per instance on all other SKUs.
8 The maximum IP connections are per instance and depend on the instance size: 1,920 per B1/S1/P0V3/P1V3 instance, 3,968 per B2/S2/P2V3 instance, 8,064 per B3/S3/P3V3 instance.
9 App Service Isolated SKUs can be internally load balanced (ILB) with Azure Load Balancer, so there's no public connectivity from the internet. As a result, some features of an ILB Isolated App Service must be used from machines that have direct access to the ILB network endpoint.
10 Run custom executables and/or scripts on demand, on a schedule, or continuously as a background task within your App Service instance. Always On is required for continuous WebJobs execution. There's no predefined limit on the number of WebJobs that can run in an App Service instance. There are practical limits that depend on what the application code is trying to do.
11 Only issuing standard certificates (wildcard certificates aren't available). Limited to only one free certificate per custom domain.
12 Total storage usage across all apps deployed in a single App Service Environment (regardless of how they're allocated across different resource groups).
Automation limits
Process automation
Resource | Limit | Notes |
---|---|---|
Maximum number of new jobs that can be submitted every 30 seconds per Azure Automation account | 100 | When this limit is reached, the subsequent requests to create a job fail. The client receives an error response. |
Maximum number of concurrent running jobs at the same instance of time per Automation account | 200 | When this limit is reached, the subsequent requests to create a job fail. The client receives an error response. Free trial and Azure for Student subscriptions can run up to 10 concurrent jobs at the same instance of time per Automation account. 2 |
Maximum number of Automation accounts in a subscription in a region. | No limit 2 1 |
Enterprise and MSDN subscriptions can create Automation accounts in any of the regions supported by the service Pay-as-you-go, MPN, Azure Pass subscriptions can create 2 Automation accounts per subscription in any of the regions supported by the service. Free trial and Azure for Student subscriptions can create only one Automation account per region per subscription. Allowed list of regions: EastUS, EastUS2, WestUS, NorthEurope, SoutheastAsia, and JapanWest2 |
Maximum storage size of job metadata for a 30-day rolling period | 10 GB (approximately 4 million jobs) | When this limit is reached, the subsequent requests to create a job fail. |
Maximum job stream limit | 1 MiB | A single stream cannot be larger than 1 MiB. |
Maximum job stream limit on Azure Automation portal | 200KB | Portal limit to show the job logs. |
Maximum number of modules that can be imported every 30 seconds per Automation account | 5 | |
Maximum size of a module | 100 MB | |
Maximum size of a node configuration file | 1 MB | Applies to state configuration |
Job run time, Free tier | 500 minutes per subscription per calendar month | |
Maximum amount of disk space allowed per sandbox1 | 1 GB | Applies to Azure sandboxes only. |
Maximum amount of memory given to a sandbox1 | 400 MB | Applies to Azure sandboxes only. |
Maximum number of network sockets allowed per sandbox1 | 1,000 | Applies to Azure sandboxes only. |
Maximum runtime allowed per runbook1 | 3 hours | Applies to Azure sandboxes only. |
Maximum number of system hybrid runbook workers per Automation Account | 4,000 | |
Maximum number of user hybrid runbook workers per Automation Account | 4,000 | |
Maximum number of concurrent jobs that can be run on a single Hybrid Runbook Worker | 50 | |
Maximum runbook job parameter size | 512 kilobytes | |
Maximum runbook parameters | 50 | If you reach the 50-parameter limit, you can pass a JSON or XML string to a parameter and parse it with the runbook. |
Maximum webhook payload size | 512 kilobytes | |
Maximum days that job data is retained | 30 days | |
Maximum PowerShell workflow state size | 5 MB | Applies to PowerShell workflow runbooks when checkpointing workflow. |
Maximum number of tags supported by an Automation account | 15 | |
Maximum number of characters in the value field of a variable | 1048576 |
1A sandbox is a shared environment that can be used by multiple jobs. Jobs that use the same sandbox are bound by the resource limitations of the sandbox.
2To request a limit increase, create an Azure Support request. Free subscriptions including Azure Free Account and Azure for Students aren't eligible for limit or quota increases. If you have a free subscription, you can upgrade to Pay-As-You-Go subscription.
Change Tracking and Inventory
The following table shows the tracked item limits per machine for change tracking.
Resource | Limit | Notes |
---|---|---|
File | 500 | |
File size | 5 MB | |
Registry | 250 | |
Windows software | 250 | Doesn't include software updates. |
Linux packages | 1,250 | |
Services | 250 | |
Daemon | 250 |
Azure Update Manager
The following are the Dynamic scope recommended limits for each dynamic scope:
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Resource associations | 1000 |
Number of tag filters | 50 |
Number of Resource Group filters | 50 |
The following are the limits for schedule patching:
Indicator | Public Cloud Limit | Mooncake/Fairfax Limit |
---|---|---|
Number of schedules per subscription per region | 250 | 250 |
Total number of resource associations to a schedule | 3,000 | 3,000 |
Resource associations on each dynamic scope | 1,000 | 1,000 |
Number of dynamic scopes per resource group or subscription per region | 250 | 250 |
Number of dynamic scopes per schedule | 200 | 30 |
Total number of subscriptions attached to all dynamic scopes per schedule | 200 | 30 |
Azure App Configuration
Resource | Limit | Comment |
---|---|---|
Configuration stores for Free tier | One store per region per subscription. | |
Configuration stores for Standard tier | Unlimited stores per subscription. | |
Configuration stores for Premium tier | Unlimited stores per subscription. | |
Configuration store requests for Free tier | 1,000 requests per day | Once the quota is exhausted, HTTP status code 429 is returned for all requests until the end of the day. |
Configuration store requests for Standard tier | 30,000 per hour | Once the quota is exhausted, requests may return HTTP status code 429 indicating Too Many Requests - until the end of the hour. |
Configuration store requests for Premium tier | No quota limit on requests. | |
Throughput for Free tier | No guaranteed throughput. | |
Throughput for Standard tier | Allow up to 300 requests per second (RPS) for read requests and up to 60 RPS for write requests. | |
Throughput for Premium tier | Allow up to 450 requests per second (RPS) for read requests and up to 100 RPS for write requests. | |
Storage for Free tier | 10 MB | There is no limit on the number of keys and labels as long as their total size is below the storage limit. |
Storage for Standard tier | 1 GB | There is no limit on the number of keys and labels as long as their total size is below the storage limit. |
Storage for Premium tier | 4 GB | There is no limit on the number of keys and labels as long as their total size is below the storage limit. |
Keys and values | 10 KB | For a single key-value item, including all metadata. |
Snapshots storage for Free tier | 10 MB | Snapshots storage is extra and in addition to "Storage for Free Tier". Storage for both archived and active snapshots is counted towards this limit. |
Snapshots storage for Standard tier | 1 GB | Snapshots storage is extra and in addition to "Storage for Standard Tier". Storage for both archived and active snapshots is counted towards this limit. |
Snapshots storage for Premium tier | 4 GB | Snapshots storage is extra and in addition to "Storage for Premium Tier". Storage for both archived and active snapshots is counted towards this limit. |
Snapshot size | 1 MB |
Azure Cache for Redis limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Cache size | 1.2 TB |
Databases | 64 |
Maximum connected clients | 40,000 |
Azure Cache for Redis replicas, for high availability | 3 |
Shards in a premium cache with clustering | 10 |
Azure Cache for Redis limits and sizes are different for each pricing tier. To see the pricing tiers and their associated sizes, see Azure Cache for Redis pricing.
For more information on Azure Cache for Redis configuration limits, see Default Redis server configuration.
Because configuration and management of Azure Cache for Redis instances is done by Microsoft, not all Redis commands are supported in Azure Cache for Redis. For more information, see Redis commands not supported in Azure Cache for Redis.
Azure Cloud Services limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Web or worker roles per deployment1 | 25 |
Instance input endpoints per deployment | 25 |
Input endpoints per deployment | 25 |
Internal endpoints per deployment | 25 |
Hosted service certificates per deployment | 199 |
1Each Azure Cloud Service with web or worker roles can have two deployments, one for production and one for staging. This limit refers to the number of distinct roles, that is, configuration. This limit doesn't refer to the number of instances per role, that is, scaling.
Azure AI Search limits
Pricing tiers determine the capacity and limits of your search service. Tiers include:
- Free multitenant service, shared with other Azure subscribers, is intended for evaluation and small development projects.
- Basic provides dedicated computing resources for production workloads at a smaller scale, with up to three replicas for highly available query workloads.
- Standard, which includes S1, S2, S3, and S3 High Density, is for larger production workloads. Multiple levels exist within the Standard tier so that you can choose a resource configuration that best matches your workload profile.
Limits per subscription
You can create multiple billable search services (Basic and higher), up to the maximum number of services allowed at each tier, per region. For example, you could create up to 16 services at the Basic tier and another 16 services at the S1 tier within the same subscription and region. You could then create an additional 16 Basic services in another region for a combined total of 32 Basic services under the same subscription. For more information about tiers, see Choose a tier (or SKU) for Azure AI Search.
Maximum service limits can be raised upon request. If you need more services within the same subscription, file a support request.
Resource | Free 1 | Basic | S1 | S2 | S3 | S3 HD | L1 | L2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maximum services per region | 1 | 16 | 16 | 8 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 |
Maximum search units (SU)2 | N/A | 3 SU | 36 SU | 36 SU | 36 SU | 36 SU | 36 SU | 36 SU |
1 You can have one free search service per Azure subscription. The free tier is based on infrastructure shared with other customers. Because the hardware isn't dedicated, scale-up isn't supported, and storage is limited to 50 MB. A free search service might be deleted after extended periods of inactivity to make room for more services.
2 Search units (SU) are billing units, allocated as either a replica or a partition. You need both. To learn more about SU combinations, see Estimate and manage capacity of a search service.
Limits per search service
The following table covers SLA, partition counts, and replica counts at the service level.
Resource | Free | Basic | S1 | S2 | S3 | S3 HD | L1 | L2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Service level agreement (SLA) | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Partitions | N/A | 3 1 | 12 | 12 | 12 | 3 | 12 | 12 |
Replicas | N/A | 3 | 12 | 12 | 12 | 12 | 12 | 12 |
1 Basic tier supports three partitions and three replicas, for a total of nine search units (SU) on new search services created after April 3, 2024. Older basic services are limited to one partition and three replicas.
A search service is subject to a maximum storage limit (partition size multiplied by the number of partitions) or by a hard limit on the maximum number of indexes or indexers, whichever comes first.
Service level agreements (SLAs) apply to billable services having two or more replicas for query workloads, or three or more replicas for query and indexing workloads. The number of partitions isn't an SLA consideration. For more information, see Reliability in Azure AI Search.
Free services don't have fixed partitions or replicas and they share resources with other subscribers.
Partition storage (GB)
Per-service storage limits vary by two things: service creation date, and region. There are higher limits for newer services in most supported regions.
This table shows the progression of storage quota increases in GB over time. Higher capacity partitions were brought online starting in April 2024, in the regions listed in the footnotes. Higher capacity is limited to new search services. There's no in-place upgrade at this time.
Service creation date | Basic | S1 | S2 | S3/HD | L1 | L2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Before April 3, 2024 | 2 | 25 | 100 | 200 | 1,024 | 2,048 |
April 3, 2024 through May 17, 2024 1 | 15 | 160 | 512 | 1,024 | 1,024 | 2,048 |
After May 17, 2024 2 | 15 | 160 | 512 | 1,024 | 2,048 | 4,096 |
1 Higher capacity storage for Basic, S1, S2, S3 in these regions. Americas: Brazil South, Canada Central, Canada East, East US, East US 2, Central US, North Central US, South Central US, West US, West US 2, West US 3, West Central US. Europe: France Central. Italy North, North Europe, Norway East, Poland Central, Switzerland North, Sweden Central, UK South, UK West. Middle East: UAE North. Africa: South Africa North. Asia Pacific: Australia East, Australia Southeast, Central India, Jio India West, East Asia, Southeast Asia, Japan East, Japan West, Korea Central, Korea South.
2 Higher capacity storage for L1 and L2. More regions provide higher capacity at every billable tier. Europe: Germany North, Germany West Central, Switzerland West. Azure Government: Texas, Arizona, Virginia. Africa: South Africa North. Asia Pacific: China North 3, China East 3.
A few regions still run on older infrastructure, subject to the April 3 limits. Before creating a new service, check supported regions to make sure your region of choice provides the extra capacity.
To learn more about limits on a more granular level, such as document size, queries per second, keys, requests, and responses, see Service limits in Azure AI Search.
Azure AI services limits
The following limits are for the number of Azure AI services resources per Azure subscription. There is a limit of only one allowed 'Free' account, per resource type, per subscription. Each of the Azure AI services may have other limitations, for more information, see Azure AI services.
Type | Limit | Example |
---|---|---|
A mixture of Azure AI services resources | Maximum of 200 total Azure AI services resources per region. | 100 Azure AI Vision resources in West US, 50 Azure AI Speech resources in West US, and 50 Azure AI Language resources in West US. |
A single type of Azure AI services resources. | Maximum of 100 resources per region | 100 Azure AI Vision resources in West US 2, and 100 Azure AI Vision resources in East US. |
Azure Chaos Studio limits
For Azure Chaos Studio limits, see Azure Chaos Studio service limits.
Azure Communications Gateway limits
Some of the following default limits and quotas can be increased. To request a change, create a change request stating the limit you want to change.
The following restrictions apply to all Azure Communications Gateways:
- All traffic must use IPv4.
- All traffic must use TLS 1.2 or greater. Earlier versions aren't supported.
- The number of active calls is limited to 15% of the number of users assigned to Azure Communications Gateway. For the definition of users, see Plan and manage costs for Azure Communications Gateway.
- The number of calls being actively transcoded is limited to 5% of the total number of active calls.
Azure Communications Gateway also has limits on the SIP signaling.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Maximum SIP message size | 10 Kilobytes |
Maximum length of an SDP message body | 128 Kilobytes |
Maximum length of request URI | 256 Bytes |
Maximum length of Contact header URI | 256 Bytes |
Maximum length of the userinfo part of a URI | 256 Bytes |
Maximum length of domain name in From header | 255 Bytes |
Maximum length of a SIP header's name | 32 Bytes |
Maximum length of a SIP body name | 64 Bytes |
Maximum length of a Supported, Require or Proxy-Require header | 256 Bytes |
Maximum length of a SIP option-tag | 32 Bytes |
Some endpoints might add parameters in the following headers to an in-dialog message when those parameters weren't present in the dialog-creating message. In that case, Azure Communications Gateway strips the parameters, because RFC 3261 doesn't permit this behavior.
- Request URI
- To header
- From header
The Provisioning API has a rate limit of 100 requests per minute, applied across all the resources. A batch request to update multiple resources counts as one request.
Azure Container Apps limits
For Azure Container Apps limits, see Quotas in Azure Container Apps.
The amount of disk space available to your application varies based on the associated workload profile. Available disk space determines the image size limit you can deploy to your container apps.
For dedicated workload profiles, the image size limit is per instance.
Display name | Name | Image Size Limit (GB) |
---|---|---|
Consumption | consumption | 8* |
Dedicated-D4 | D4 | 90 |
Dedicated-D8 | D8 | 210 |
Dedicated-D16 | D16 | 460 |
Dedicated-D32 | D32 | 940 |
Dedicated-E4 | E4 | 90 |
Dedicated-E8 | E8 | 210 |
Dedicated-E16 | E16 | 460 |
Dedicated-E32 | E32 | 940 |
Dedicated-NC24-A100 (preview) | NC24-A100 | 210 |
Dedicated-NC48-A100 (preview) | NC48-A100 | 460 |
Dedicated-NC96-A100 (preview) | NC96-A100 | 940 |
* The image size limit for a consumption workload profile is a shared among both image and app. For example, logs used by your app are subject to this size limit.
Azure Cosmos DB limits
For Azure Cosmos DB limits, see Limits in Azure Cosmos DB.
Azure Data Explorer limits
The following table describes the maximum limits for Azure Data Explorer clusters.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Clusters per region per subscription | 20 |
Instances per cluster | 1,000 |
Number of databases in a cluster | 10,000 |
Number of follower clusters (data share consumers) per leader cluster (data share producer) | 100 |
Note
You can request higher limits for Number of databases in a cluster and Clusters per region per subscription. To request an increase, contact Azure Support.
The following table describes the limits on management operations performed on Azure Data Explorer clusters.
Scope | Operation | Limit |
---|---|---|
Cluster | read (for example, get a cluster) | 500 per 5 minutes |
Cluster | write (for example, create a database) | 1,000 per hour |
Azure Database for MySQL
For Azure Database for MySQL limits, see Limitations in Azure Database for MySQL.
Azure Database for PostgreSQL
For Azure Database for PostgreSQL limits, see Limitations in Azure Database for PostgreSQL.
Azure Deployment Environments limits
Subscription | Runtime limit per deployment | Runtime limit per month per region per subscription | Storage limit per Environment |
---|---|---|---|
Enterprise | 30 min | 5000 min | 1 GB |
Pay as you go | 10 min | 200 min | 1 GB |
Azure Pass | 10 min | 200 min | 1 GB |
MSDN | 10 min | 200 min | 1 GB |
CSP | 10 min | 200 min | 1 GB |
Free trial | 10 min | 200 min | 1 GB |
Azure for students | 10 min | 200 min | 1 GB |
Azure Files and Azure File Sync
To learn more about the limits for Azure Files and File Sync, see Azure Files scalability and performance targets.
Azure Functions limits
Resource | Consumption plan | Flex Consumption plan13 | Premium plan | Dedicated plan/ASE | Container Apps |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Default timeout duration (min) | 5 | 30 | 30 | 301 | 3016 |
Max timeout duration (min) | 10 | unbounded8 | unbounded8 | unbounded2 | unbounded17 |
Max outbound connections (per instance) | 600 active (1200 total) | unbounded | unbounded | unbounded | unbounded |
Max request size (MB)3 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
Max query string length3 | 4096 | 4096 | 4096 | 4096 | 4096 |
Max request URL length3 | 8192 | 8192 | 8192 | 8192 | 8192 |
ACU per instance | 100 | varies | 210-840 | 100-840/210-2509 | varies |
Max memory (GB per instance) | 1.5 | 414 | 3.5-14 | 1.75-14/3.5-14 | varies |
Max instance count (Windows/Linux) | 200/100 | 1000 15 | 100/20 | varies by SKU/10010 | 10-30018 |
Function apps per plan12 | 100 | 100 | 100 | unbounded4 | unbounded4 |
App Service plans | 100 per region | n/a | 100 per resource group | 100 per resource group | n/a |
Deployment slots per app11 | 2 | n/a | 3 | 1-2010 | not supported |
Storage (temporary)5 | 0.5 GB | 0.8 GB | 21-140 GB | 11-140 GB | n/a |
Storage (persisted) | 1 GB6 | 0 GB6 | 250 GB | 10-1000 GB10 | n/a |
Custom domains per app | 5007 | 500 | 500 | 500 | not supported |
Custom domain SSL support | unbounded SNI SSL connection included | unbounded SNI SSL and 1 IP SSL connections included | unbounded SNI SSL and 1 IP SSL connections included | unbounded SNI SSL and 1 IP SSL connections included | not supported |
Notes on service limits:
- By default, the timeout for the Functions 1.x runtime in an App Service plan is unbounded.
- Requires the App Service plan be set to Always On. Pay at standard rates. A grace period of 10 minutes is given during platform updates.
- These limits are set in the host.
- The actual number of function apps that you can host depends on the activity of the apps, the size of the machine instances, and the corresponding resource utilization.
- The storage limit is the total content size in temporary storage across all apps in the same App Service plan. For Consumption plans on Linux, the storage is currently 1.5 GB.
- Consumption plan uses an Azure Files share for persisted storage. When you provide your own Azure Files share, the specific share size limits depend on the storage account you set for WEBSITE_CONTENTAZUREFILECONNECTIONSTRING. On Linux, you must explicitly mount your own Azure Files share for both Flex Consumption and Consumption plans.
- When your function app is hosted in a Consumption plan, only the CNAME option is supported. For function apps in a Premium plan or an App Service plan, you can map a custom domain using either a CNAME or an A record.
- There is no maximum execution timeout duration enforced. However, the grace period given to a function execution is 60 minutes during scale in and 10 minutes during platform updates.
- Workers are roles that host customer apps. Workers are available in three fixed sizes: One vCPU/3.5 GB RAM; Two vCPU/7 GB RAM; Four vCPU/14 GB RAM.
- See App Service limits for details.
- Including the production slot.
- There's currently a limit of 5000 function apps in a given subscription.
- The Flex Consumption plan is currently in preview.
- Flex Consumption plan instance sizes are currently defined as either 2,048 MB or 4,096 MB. For more information, see Instance memory.
- Flex Consumption plan during preview has a regional subscription quota that limits the total memory usage of all instances across a given region. For more information, see Instance memory.
- When the minimum number of replicas is set to zero, the default timeout depends on the specific triggers used in the app.
- When the minimum number of replicas is set to one or more.
- On Container Apps, you can set the maximum number of replicas, which is honored as long as there's enough cores quota available.
For more information, see Functions Hosting plans comparison.
Azure Health Data Services
Azure Health Data Services limits
Health Data Services is a set of managed API services based on open standards and frameworks. Health Data Services enables workflows to improve healthcare and offers scalable and secure healthcare solutions. Health Data Services includes Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) service, the Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) service, and MedTech service.
FHIR service is an implementation of the FHIR specification within Health Data Services. It enables you to combine in a single workspace one or more FHIR service instances with optional DICOM and MedTech service instances. Azure API for FHIR is generally available as a stand-alone service offering.
Each FHIR service instance in Azure Health Data Services has a storage limit of 4 TB by default. If you have more data, you can ask Microsoft to increase storage up to 100 TB for your FHIR service. To request storage greater than 4 TB, create a support request on the Azure portal and use the issue type Service and Subscription limit (quotas).
Quota Name | Default Limit | Maximum Limit | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Workspace | 10 | Contact support | Limit per subscription |
FHIR | 10 | Contact support | Limit per workspace |
DICOM | 10 | Contact support | Limit per workspace |
MedTech | 10 | N/A | Limit per workspace, can't be increased |
Azure API for FHIR service limits
Azure API for FHIR is a managed, standards-based, compliant API for clinical health data that enables solutions for actionable analytics and machine learning.
Quota Name | Default Limit | Maximum Limit | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Request Units (RUs) | 100,000 RUs | Contact support Maximum available is 1,000,000. | You need a minimum of 400 RUs or 40 RUs/GB, whichever is larger. |
Concurrent connections | 15 concurrent connections on two instances (for a total of 30 concurrent requests) | Contact support | |
Azure API for FHIR Service Instances per Subscription | 10 | Contact support |
Azure Kubernetes Service limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Maximum clusters per subscription globally | 5,000 |
Maximum clusters per subscription per region 1 | 100 |
Maximum nodes per cluster with Virtual Machine Scale Sets and Standard Load Balancer SKU | 5,000 across all node pools Note: If you're unable to scale up to 5,000 nodes per cluster, see Best Practices for Large Clusters. |
Maximum nodes per node pool (Virtual Machine Scale Sets node pools) | 1000 |
Maximum node pools per cluster | 100 |
Maximum pods per node: with Kubenet networking plug-in1 | Maximum: 250 Azure CLI default: 110 Azure Resource Manager template default: 110 Azure portal deployment default: 30 |
Maximum pods per node: with Azure Container Networking Interface (Azure CNI)2 | Maximum: 250 Maximum recommended for Windows Server containers: 110 Default: 30 |
Open Service Mesh (OSM) AKS addon | Kubernetes Cluster Version: AKS Supported Versions OSM controllers per cluster: 1 Pods per OSM controller: 1600 Kubernetes service accounts managed by OSM: 160 |
Maximum load-balanced kubernetes services per cluster with Standard Load Balancer SKU | 300 |
Maximum nodes per cluster with Virtual Machine Availability Sets and Basic Load Balancer SKU | 100 |
1 More are allowed upon request.
2 Windows Server containers must use Azure CNI networking plug-in. Kubenet isn't supported for Windows Server containers.
Kubernetes Control Plane tier | Limit |
---|---|
Standard tier | Automatically scales Kubernetes API server based on load. Larger control plane component limits and API server/etcd instances. |
Free tier | Limited resources with inflight requests limit of 50 mutating and 100 read-only calls. Recommended node limit of 10 nodes per cluster. Best for experimenting, learning, and simple testing. Not advised for production/critical workloads. |
Azure Lab Services
The following limits are for the number of Azure Lab Services resources.
Per resource type
Grouping | Resource type | Limit |
---|---|---|
Per subscription | Labs | 980 |
Per resource group | Labs | 800 |
Lab plans | 800 | |
Per lab | Schedules | 250 |
Virtual machines (VMs) | 400 |
Per region - Lab plans and labs
Subscription type | Lab plan limits | Lab limits |
---|---|---|
Default | 2 | 2 |
Pay As You Go | 500 | 500 |
MPN | 500 | 500 |
Azure In Open | 500 | 500 |
Enterprise Agreement | 500 | 500 |
MSDN | 500 | 500 |
Sponsored | 100 | 15 |
CSP | 500 | 500 |
Azure Pass | 100 | 25 |
Free Trial | 100 | 15 |
Azure for Students | 100 | 15 |
For more information about Azure Lab Services capacity limits, see Capacity limits in Azure Lab Services.
Contact support to request an increase your limit.
Azure Load Testing limits
For Azure Load Testing limits, see Service limits in Azure Load Testing.
Azure Machine Learning limits
The latest values for Azure Machine Learning Compute quotas can be found in the Azure Machine Learning quota page
Azure Maps limits
Note
Azure Maps Gen1 Price Tier Retirement
Gen1 pricing tier is now deprecated and will be retired on 9/15/26. Gen2 pricing tier replaces Gen1 (both S0 and S1) pricing tier. If your Azure Maps account has Gen1 pricing tier selected, you can switch to Gen2 pricing before it's retired, otherwise it will automatically be updated. For more information, see Manage the pricing tier of your Azure Maps account.
For Azure Maps queries per second limits, see Azure Maps QPS rate limits
The following table shows the cumulative data size limit for Azure Maps accounts in an Azure subscription. The Azure Maps Data service is available only at the Gen1 (S1) and Gen2 pricing tier.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Maximum storage per Azure subscription | 1 GB |
Maximum size per file upload | 100 MB |
Note
Azure Maps Data service Retirement
The Azure Maps Data service (both [v1] and [v2]) is now deprecated and will be retired on 9/16/24. The Azure Maps Data Registry service is replacing the Data service. For more information, see How to create data registry
Azure Managed Grafana limits
Limit | Description | Essential | Standard |
---|---|---|---|
Alert rules | Maximum number of alert rules that can be created. | Not supported | 500 per instance |
Dashboards | Maximum number of dashboards that can be created. | 20 per instance | Unlimited |
Data sources | Maximum number of datasources that can be created. | 5 per instance | Unlimited |
API keys | Maximum number of API keys that can be created. | 2 per instance | 100 per instance |
Data query timeout | Maximum wait duration for the reception of data query response headers, before Grafana times out. | 200 seconds | 200 seconds |
Data source query size | Maximum number of bytes that are read/accepted from responses of outgoing HTTP requests. | 80 MB | 80 MB |
Render image or PDF report wait time | Maximum duration for an image or report PDF rendering request to complete before Grafana times out. | Not supported | 220 seconds |
Instance count | Maximum number of instances in a single subscription per Azure region. | 1 | 50 |
Requests per IP | Maximum number of requests per IP per second. | 90 requests per second | 90 requests per second |
Requests per HTTP host | Maximum number of requests per HTTP host per second. The HTTP host stands for the Host header in incoming HTTP requests, which can describe each unique host client. | 45 requests per second | 45 requests per second |
Azure Monitor limits
For Azure Monitor limits, see Azure Monitor service limits.
Azure Data Factory limits
Azure Data Factory is a multitenant service that has the following default limits in place to make sure customer subscriptions are protected from each other's workloads. To raise the limits up to the maximum for your subscription, contact support.
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
Total number of entities, such as pipelines, data sets, triggers, linked services, Private Endpoints, and integration runtimes, within a data factory | 5,000 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Total CPU cores for Azure-SSIS Integration Runtimes under one subscription | 64 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Concurrent pipeline runs per data factory that's shared among all pipelines in the factory | 10,000 | 10,000 |
Concurrent External activity runs per subscription per Azure Integration Runtime region External activities are managed on integration runtime but execute on linked services, including Databricks, stored procedure, Web, and others. This limit doesn't apply to Self-hosted IR. |
3,000 | 3,000 |
Concurrent Pipeline activity runs per subscription per Azure Integration Runtime region Pipeline activities execute on integration runtime, including Lookup, GetMetadata, and Delete. This limit doesn't apply to Self-hosted IR. |
1,000 | 1,000 |
Concurrent authoring operations per subscription per Azure Integration Runtime region Including test connection, browse folder list and table list, preview data. This limit doesn't apply to Self-hosted IR. |
200 | 200 |
Concurrent Data Integration Units1 consumption per subscription per Azure Integration Runtime region | Region group 12: 6,000 Region group 22: 3,000 Region group 32: 1,500 |
Region group 12: 6,000 Region group 22: 3,000 Region group 32: 1,500 |
Concurrent Data Integration Units1 consumption per subscription per Azure Integration Runtime region in managed virtual network | 2,400 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Maximum activities per pipeline, which includes inner activities for containers | 80 | 120 |
Maximum number of linked integration runtimes that can be created against a single self-hosted integration runtime | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of nodes that can be created against a single self-hosted integration runtime | 4 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Maximum parameters per pipeline | 50 | 50 |
ForEach items | 100,000 | 100,000 |
ForEach parallelism | 20 | 50 |
Maximum queued runs per pipeline | 100 | 100 |
Characters per expression | 8,192 | 8,192 |
Minimum tumbling window trigger interval | 5 min | 15 min |
Minimum timeout for pipeline activity runs | 10 min | 10 min |
Maximum timeout for pipeline activity runs | 7 days | 7 days |
Bytes per object for pipeline objects3 | 200 KB | 200 KB |
Bytes per object for dataset and linked service objects3 | 100 KB | 2,000 KB |
Bytes per payload for each activity run4 | 896 KB | 896 KB |
Data Integration Units1 per copy activity run | 256 | 256 |
Write API calls | 1,200/h | 1,200/h This limit is imposed by Azure Resource Manager, not Azure Data Factory. |
Read API calls | 12,500/h | 12,500/h This limit is imposed by Azure Resource Manager, not Azure Data Factory. |
Monitoring queries per minute | 1,000 | 1,000 |
Maximum time of data flow debug session | 8 hrs | 8 hrs |
Concurrent number of data flows per integration runtime | 50 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Concurrent number of data flows per integration runtime in managed vNet | 50 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Concurrent number of data flow debug sessions per user per factory | 3 | 3 |
Data Flow Azure IR TTL limit | 4 hrs | 4 hrs |
Meta Data Entity Size limit in a factory | 2 GB | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
1 The data integration unit (DIU) is used in a cloud-to-cloud copy operation. Learn more from Data integration units (version 2). For information on billing, see Azure Data Factory pricing.
2 Azure Integration Runtime is globally available to ensure data compliance, efficiency, and reduced network egress costs.
Region group | Regions |
---|---|
Region group 1 | Central US, East US, East US 2, North Europe, West Europe, West US, West US 2 |
Region group 2 | Australia East, Australia Southeast, Brazil South, Central India, Japan East, North Central US, South Central US, Southeast Asia, West Central US |
Region group 3 | Other regions |
If managed virtual network is enabled, the data integration unit (DIU) in all region groups are 2,400.
3 Pipeline, data set, and linked service objects represent a logical grouping of your workload. Limits for these objects don't relate to the amount of data you can move and process with Azure Data Factory. Data Factory is designed to scale to handle petabytes of data.
4 The payload for each activity run includes the activity configuration, the associated dataset(s) and linked service(s) configurations if any, and a small portion of system properties generated per activity type. Limit for this payload size doesn't relate to the amount of data you can move and process with Azure Data Factory. Learn about the symptoms and recommendation if you hit this limit.
Web service call limits
Azure Resource Manager has limits for API calls. You can make API calls at a rate within the Azure Resource Manager API limits.
Azure NetApp Files
Azure NetApp Files has a regional limit for capacity. The standard capacity limit for each subscription is 25 TiB, per region, across all service levels. To increase the capacity, use the Service and subscription limits (quotas) support request.
To learn more about the limits for Azure NetApp Files, see Resource limits for Azure NetApp Files.
Azure Policy limits
There's a maximum count for each object type for Azure Policy. For definitions, an entry of Scope means the management group or subscription. For assignments and exemptions, an entry of Scope means the management group, subscription, resource group, or individual resource.
Where | What | Maximum count |
---|---|---|
Scope | Policy definitions | 500 |
Scope | Initiative definitions | 200 |
Tenant | Initiative definitions | 2,500 |
Scope | Policy or initiative assignments | 200 |
Scope | Exemptions | 1000 |
Policy definition | Parameters | 20 |
Initiative definition | Policies | 1000 |
Initiative definition | Parameters | 400 |
Policy or initiative assignments | Exclusions (notScopes) | 400 |
Policy rule | Nested conditionals | 512 |
Remediation task | Resources | 50,000 |
Policy definition, initiative, or assignment request body | Bytes | 1,048,576 |
Policy rules have more limits to the number of conditions and their complexity. For more information, go to Policy rule limits for more details.
Azure Quantum limits
Provider Limits & Quota
The Azure Quantum Service supports both first and third-party service providers. Third-party providers own their limits and quotas. Users can view offers and limits in the Azure portal when configuring third-party providers.
You can find the published quota limits for Microsoft's first party Optimization Solutions provider below.
Learn & Develop SKU
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
CPU-based concurrent jobs | up to 51 concurrent jobs |
FPGA-based concurrent jobs | up to 21 concurrent jobs |
CPU-based solver hours | 20 hours per month |
FPGA-based solver hours | 1 hour per month |
While on the Learn & Develop SKU, you cannot request an increase on your quota limits. Instead you should switch to the Performance at Scale SKU.
Performance at Scale SKU
Resource | Default Limit | Maximum Limit |
---|---|---|
CPU-based concurrent jobs | up to 1001 concurrent jobs | same as default limit |
FPGA-based concurrent jobs | up to 101 concurrent jobs | same as default limit |
Solver hours | 1,000 hours per month | up to 50,000 hours per month |
Reach out to Azure Support to request a limit increase.
For more information, please review the Azure Quantum pricing page. Review the relevant provider pricing pages in the Azure portal for details on third-party offerings.
1 Describes the number of jobs that can be queued at the same time.
Azure RBAC limits
The following limits apply to Azure role-based access control (Azure RBAC).
Area | Resource | Limit |
---|---|---|
Azure role assignments | ||
Azure role assignments per Azure subscription | 4,000 | |
Azure role assignments per management group | 500 | |
Size of description for Azure role assignments | 2 KB | |
Size of condition for Azure role assignments | 8 KB | |
Azure custom roles | ||
Azure custom roles per tenant | 5,000 | |
Azure custom roles per tenant (for Microsoft Azure operated by 21Vianet) |
2,000 | |
Size of role name for Azure custom roles | 512 chars | |
Size of description for Azure custom roles | 2 KB | |
Number of assignable scopes for Azure custom roles | 2,000 |
Azure SignalR Service limits
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
Azure SignalR Service units per instance for Free tier | 1 | 1 |
Azure SignalR Service units per instance for Standard/Premium_P1 tier | 100 | 100 |
Azure SignalR Service units per instance for Premium_P2 tier | 100 - 1,000 | 100 - 1,000 |
Azure SignalR Service units per subscription per region for Free tier | 5 | 5 |
Total Azure SignalR Service unit counts per subscription per region | 150 | Unlimited |
Concurrent connections per unit for Free tier | 20 | 20 |
Concurrent connections per unit for Standard/Premium tier | 1,000 | 1,000 |
Included messages per unit per day for Free tier | 20,000 | 20,000 |
Additional messages per unit per day for Free tier | 0 | 0 |
Included messages per unit per day for Standard/Premium tier | 1,000,000 | 1,000,000 |
Additional messages per unit per day for Standard/Premium tier | Unlimited | Unlimited |
To request an update to your subscription's default limits, open a support ticket.
For more information about how connections and messages are counted, see Messages and connections in Azure SignalR Service.
If your requirements exceed the limits, switch from Free tier to Standard tier and add units. For more information, see How to scale an Azure SignalR Service instance?.
If your requirements exceed the limits of a single instance, add instances. For more information, see How to enable Geo-Replication in Azure SignalR Service.
Azure Spring Apps limits
To learn more about the limits for Azure Spring Apps, see Quotas and service plans for Azure Spring Apps.
Azure Storage limits
This section lists the following limits for Azure Storage:
- Standard storage account limits
- Azure Storage resource provider limits
- Azure Blob Storage limits
- Azure Queue storage limits
- Azure Table storage limits
Standard storage account limits
The following table describes default limits for Azure general-purpose v2 (GPv2), general-purpose v1 (GPv1), and Blob storage accounts. The ingress limit refers to all data that is sent to a storage account. The egress limit refers to all data that is received from a storage account.
Microsoft recommends that you use a GPv2 storage account for most scenarios. You can easily upgrade a GPv1 or a Blob storage account to a GPv2 account with no downtime and without the need to copy data. For more information, see Upgrade to a GPv2 storage account.
Note
You can request higher capacity and ingress limits. To request an increase, contact Azure Support.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Maximum number of storage accounts with standard endpoints per region per subscription, including standard and premium storage accounts. | 250 by default, 500 by request1 |
Maximum number of storage accounts with Azure DNS zone endpoints (preview) per region per subscription, including standard and premium storage accounts. | 5000 (preview) |
Default maximum storage account capacity | 5 PiB 2 |
Maximum number of blob containers, blobs, directories and subdirectories (if Hierarchical Namespace is enabled), file shares, tables, queues, entities, or messages per storage account. | No limit |
Default maximum request rate per storage account | 20,000 requests per second2 |
Default maximum ingress per general-purpose v2 and Blob storage account in the following regions:
|
60 Gbps2 |
Default maximum ingress per general-purpose v2 and Blob storage account in regions that aren't listed in the previous row. | 25 Gbps2 |
Default maximum ingress for general-purpose v1 storage accounts (all regions) | 10 Gbps2 |
Default maximum egress for general-purpose v2 and Blob storage accounts in the following regions:
|
200 Gbps2 |
Default maximum egress for general-purpose v2 and Blob storage accounts in regions that aren't listed in the previous row. | 50 Gbps2 |
Maximum egress for general-purpose v1 storage accounts (US regions) | 20 Gbps if RA-GRS/GRS is enabled, 30 Gbps for LRS/ZRS |
Maximum egress for general-purpose v1 storage accounts (non-US regions) | 10 Gbps if RA-GRS/GRS is enabled, 15 Gbps for LRS/ZRS |
Maximum number of IP address rules per storage account | 400 |
Maximum number of virtual network rules per storage account | 400 |
Maximum number of resource instance rules per storage account | 200 |
Maximum number of private endpoints per storage account | 200 |
1 With a quota increase, you can create up to 500 storage accounts with standard endpoints per region. For more information, see Increase Azure Storage account quotas. 2 Azure Storage standard accounts support higher capacity limits and higher limits for ingress and egress by request. To request an increase in account limits, contact Azure Support.
Azure Storage resource provider limits
The following limits apply only when you perform management operations by using Azure Resource Manager with Azure Storage. The limits apply per region of the resource in the request.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Storage account management operations (read) | 800 per 5 minutes |
Storage account management operations (write) | 10 per second / 1200 per hour |
Storage account management operations (list) | 100 per 5 minutes |
Azure Blob Storage limits
Resource | Target |
---|---|
Maximum size of single blob container | Same as maximum storage account capacity |
Maximum number of blocks in a block blob or append blob | 50,000 blocks |
Maximum size of a block in a block blob | 4000 MiB |
Maximum size of a block blob | 50,000 X 4000 MiB (approximately 190.7 TiB) |
Maximum size of a block in an append blob | 4 MiB |
Maximum size of an append blob | 50,000 x 4 MiB (approximately 195 GiB) |
Maximum size of a page blob | 8 TiB2 |
Maximum number of stored access policies per blob container | 5 |
Target request rate for a single blob | Up to 500 requests per second |
Target throughput for a single page blob | Up to 60 MiB per second2 |
Target throughput for a single block blob | Up to storage account ingress/egress limits1 |
1 Throughput for a single blob depends on several factors. These factors include but aren't limited to: concurrency, request size, performance tier, speed of source for uploads, and destination for downloads. To take advantage of the performance enhancements of high-throughput block blobs, upload larger blobs or blocks. Specifically, call the Put Blob or Put Block operation with a blob or block size that is greater than 256 KiB.
2 Page blobs aren't yet supported in accounts that have a hierarchical namespace enabled.
The following table describes the maximum block and blob sizes permitted by service version.
Service version | Maximum block size (via Put Block) | Maximum blob size (via Put Block List) | Maximum blob size via single write operation (via Put Blob) |
---|---|---|---|
Version 2019-12-12 and later | 4000 MiB | Approximately 190.7 TiB (4000 MiB X 50,000 blocks) | 5000 MiB |
Version 2016-05-31 through version 2019-07-07 | 100 MiB | Approximately 4.75 TiB (100 MiB X 50,000 blocks) | 256 MiB |
Versions prior to 2016-05-31 | 4 MiB | Approximately 195 GiB (4 MiB X 50,000 blocks) | 64 MiB |
Azure Queue storage limits
Resource | Target |
---|---|
Maximum size of a single queue | 500 TiB |
Maximum size of a message in a queue | 64 KiB |
Maximum number of stored access policies per queue | 5 |
Maximum request rate per storage account | 20,000 messages per second, which assumes a 1-KiB message size |
Target throughput for a single queue (1-KiB messages) | Up to 2,000 messages per second |
Azure Table storage limits
The following table describes capacity, scalability, and performance targets for Table storage.
Resource | Target |
---|---|
Number of tables in an Azure storage account | Limited only by the capacity of the storage account |
Number of partitions in a table | Limited only by the capacity of the storage account |
Number of entities in a partition | Limited only by the capacity of the storage account |
Maximum size of a single table | 500 TiB |
Maximum size of a single entity, including all property values | 1 MiB |
Maximum number of properties in a table entity | 255 (including the three system properties, PartitionKey, RowKey, and Timestamp) |
Maximum total size of an individual property in an entity | Varies by property type. For more information, see Property Types in Understanding the Table Service Data Model. |
Size of the PartitionKey | A string up to 1024 characters in size |
Size of the RowKey | A string up to 1024 characters in size |
Size of an entity group transaction | A transaction can include at most 100 entities and the payload must be less than 4 MiB in size. An entity group transaction can include an update to an entity only once. |
Maximum number of stored access policies per table | 5 |
Maximum request rate per storage account | 20,000 transactions per second, which assumes a 1-KiB entity size |
Target throughput for a single table partition (1 KiB-entities) | Up to 2,000 entities per second |
Azure subscription creation limits
To learn more about the creation limits for Azure subscriptions, see Billing accounts and scopes in the Azure portal.
Azure Virtual Desktop Service limits
The following table describes the maximum limits for Azure Virtual Desktop.
Azure Virtual Desktop Object | Per Parent Container Object | Service Limit |
---|---|---|
Workspace | Microsoft Entra tenant | 1300 |
HostPool | Workspace | 400 |
Application group | Microsoft Entra tenant | 5001 |
RemoteApp | Application group | 500 |
Role Assignment | Any Azure Virtual Desktop Object | 200 |
Session Host | HostPool | 10,000 |
1If you require over 500 Application groups then please raise a support ticket via the Azure portal.
All other Azure resources used in Azure Virtual Desktop such as Virtual Machines, Storage, Networking etc. are all subject to their own resource limitations documented in the relevant sections of this article. To visualise the relationship between all the Azure Virtual Desktop objects, review this article Relationships between Azure Virtual Desktop logical components.
To get started with Azure Virtual Desktop, use the getting started guide. For deeper architectural content for Azure Virtual Desktop, use the Azure Virtual Desktop section of the Cloud Adoption Framework. For pricing information for Azure Virtual Desktop, add "Azure Virtual Desktop" within the Compute section of the Azure Pricing Calculator.
Azure VMware Solution limits
The following table describes the maximum limits for Azure VMware Solution.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
vSphere clusters per private cloud | 12 |
Minimum number of ESXi hosts per cluster | 3 (hard-limit) |
Maximum number of ESXi hosts per cluster | 16 (hard-limit) |
Maximum number of ESXi hosts per private cloud | 96 |
Maximum number of vCenter Servers per private cloud | 1 (hard-limit) |
Maximum number of HCX site pairings | 25 (any edition) |
Maximum number of HCX service meshes | 10 (any edition) |
Maximum number of Azure VMware Solution ExpressRoute linked private clouds from a single location to a single Virtual Network Gateway | 4 The virtual network gateway used determines the actual max linked private clouds. For more information, see About ExpressRoute virtual network gateways If you exceed this threshold use Azure VMware Solution Interconnect to aggregate private cloud connectivity within the Azure region. |
Maximum Azure VMware Solution ExpressRoute port speed | 10 Gbps (use Ultra Performance Gateway SKU with FastPath enabled) The virtual network gateway used determines the actual bandwidth. For more information, see About ExpressRoute virtual network gateways |
Maximum number of Azure Public IPv4 addresses assigned to NSX | 2,000 |
Maximum number of Azure VMware Solution Interconnects per private cloud | 10 |
Maximum number of Azure ExpressRoute Global Reach connections per Azure VMware Solution private cloud | 8 |
vSAN capacity limits | 75% of total usable (keep 25% available for SLA) |
VMware Site Recovery Manager - Maximum number of protected Virtual Machines | 3,000 |
VMware Site Recovery Manager - Maximum number of Virtual Machines per recovery plan | 2,000 |
VMware Site Recovery Manager - Maximum number of protection groups per recovery plan | 250 |
VMware Site Recovery Manager - RPO Values | 5 min or higher * (hard-limit) |
VMware Site Recovery Manager - Maximum number of virtual machines per protection group | 500 |
VMware Site Recovery Manager - Maximum number of recovery plans | 250 |
* For information about Recovery Point Objective (RPO) lower than 15 minutes, see How the 5 Minute Recovery Point Objective Works in the vSphere Replication Administration guide.
For other VMware-specific limits, use the VMware configuration maximum tool.
Azure Web PubSub limits
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
Azure Web PubSub Service units per instance for Free tier | 1 | 1 |
Azure Web PubSub Service units per instance for Standard/Premium_P1 tier | 100 | 100 |
Azure Web PubSub Service units per instance for Premium_P2 tier | 100 - 1,000 | 100 - 1,000 |
Azure Web PubSub Service units per subscription per region for Free tier | 5 | 5 |
Total Azure Web PubSub Service unit counts per subscription per region | 150 | Unlimited |
Concurrent connections per unit for Free tier | 20 | 20 |
Concurrent connections per unit for Standard/Premium tier | 1,000 | 1,000 |
Included messages per unit per day for Free tier | 20,000 | 20,000 |
Additional messages per unit per day for Free tier | 0 | 0 |
Included messages per unit per day for Standard/Premium tier | 1,000,000 | 1,000,000 |
Additional messages per unit per day for Standard/Premium tier | Unlimited | Unlimited |
To request an update to your subscription's default limits, open a support ticket.
For more information about how connections and messages are counted in billing, see Billing model in Azure Web PubSub Service.
If your requirements exceed the limits, scale up from Free tier to Standard/Premium tier or scale out units. For more information, see How to scale an Azure Web PubSub Service instance.
If your requirements exceed the limits of a single instance, add instances. For more information, see How to use Geo-Replication in Azure Web PubSub.
Backup limits
For a summary of Azure Backup support settings and limitations, see Azure Backup Support Matrices.
Batch limits
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
Azure Batch accounts per region per subscription | 1-3 | 50 |
Dedicated cores per Batch account | 0-9001 | Contact support |
Low-priority cores per Batch account | 0-1001 | Contact support |
Active jobs and job schedules per Batch account (completed jobs have no limit) | 100-300 | 1,0002 |
Pools per Batch account | 0-1001 | 5002 |
Private endpoint connections per Batch account | 100 | 100 |
1 For capacity management purposes, the default quotas for new Batch accounts in some regions and for some subscription types have been reduced from the above range of values. In some cases, these limits have been reduced to zero. When you create a new Batch account, check your quotas and request an appropriate core or service quota increase, if necessary. Alternatively, consider reusing Batch accounts that already have sufficient quota or user subscription pool allocation Batch accounts to maintain core and VM family quota across all Batch accounts on the subscription. Service quotas like active jobs or pools apply to each distinct Batch account even for user subscription pool allocation Batch accounts.
2 To request an increase beyond this limit, contact Azure Support.
Note
Default limits vary depending on the type of subscription you use to create a Batch account. Cores quotas shown are for Batch accounts in Batch service mode. View the quotas in your Batch account.
Classic deployment model limits
If you use classic deployment model instead of the Azure Resource Manager deployment model, the following limits apply.
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
vCPUs per subscription1 | 20 | 10,000 |
Coadministrators per subscription | 200 | 200 |
Storage accounts per subscription2 | 100 | 100 |
Cloud services per subscription | 20 | 200 |
Local networks per subscription | 10 | 500 |
DNS servers per subscription | 9 | 100 |
Reserved IPs per subscription | 20 | 100 |
Affinity groups per subscription | 256 | 256 |
Subscription name length (characters) | 64 | 64 |
1Extra small instances count as one vCPU toward the vCPU limit despite using a partial CPU core.
2The storage account limit includes both Standard and Premium storage accounts.
Container Instances limits
Resource | Actual Limit |
---|---|
Standard sku container groups per region per subscription | 100 |
Dedicated sku container groups per region per subscription | 01 |
Number of containers per container group | 60 |
Number of volumes per container group | 20 |
Standard sku cores (CPUs) per region per subscription | 100 |
Standard sku cores (CPUs) for K80 GPU per region per subscription | 0 |
Standard sku cores (CPUs) for V100 GPU per region per subscription | 0 |
Ports per IP | 5 |
Container instance log size - running instance | 4 MB |
Container instance log size - stopped instance | 16 KB or 1,000 lines |
Container group creates per hour | 3001 |
Container group creates per 5 minutes | 1001 |
Container group deletes per hour | 3001 |
Container group deletes per 5 minutes | 1001 |
1To request a limit increase, create an Azure Support request. Free subscriptions including Azure Free Account and Azure for Students aren't eligible for limit or quota increases. If you have a free subscription, you can upgrade to a Pay-As-You-Go subscription.
2Default limit for Pay-As-You-Go subscription. Limit may differ for other category types.
Container Registry limits
The following table details the features and limits of the Basic, Standard, and Premium service tiers.
Resource | Basic | Standard | Premium |
---|---|---|---|
Included storage1 (GiB) | 10 | 100 | 500 |
Storage limit (TiB) | 40 | 40 | 40 |
Maximum image layer size (GiB) | 200 | 200 | 200 |
Maximum manifest size (MiB) | 4 | 4 | 4 |
ReadOps per minute2, 3 | 1,000 | 3,000 | 10,000 |
WriteOps per minute2, 4 | 100 | 500 | 2,000 |
Download bandwidth2 (Mbps) | 30 | 60 | 100 |
Upload bandwidth 2 (Mbps) | 10 | 20 | 50 |
Webhooks | 2 | 10 | 500 |
Geo-replication | N/A | N/A | Supported |
Availability zones | N/A | N/A | Supported |
Content trust | N/A | N/A | Supported |
Private link with private endpoints | N/A | N/A | Supported |
• Private endpoints | N/A | N/A | 200 |
Public IP network rules | N/A | N/A | 100 |
Service endpoint VNet access | N/A | N/A | Preview |
• Virtual network rules | N/A | N/A | 100 |
Customer-managed keys | N/A | N/A | Supported |
Repository-scoped permissions | Supported | Supported | Supported |
• Tokens | 100 | 500 | 50,000 |
• Scope maps | 100 | 500 | 50,000 |
• Actions | 500 | 500 | 500 |
• Repositories per scope map5 | 500 | 500 | 500 |
Anonymous pull access | N/A | Preview | Preview |
1 Storage included in the daily rate for each tier. Additional storage may be used, up to the registry storage limit, at an additional daily rate per GiB. For rate information, see Azure Container Registry pricing. If you need storage beyond the registry storage limit, please contact Azure Support.
2ReadOps, WriteOps, and Bandwidth are minimum estimates. Azure Container Registry strives to improve performance as usage requires. Both resources, ACR, and the device must be in the same region to achieve a fast download speed.
3A docker pull translates to multiple read operations based on the number of layers in the image, plus the manifest retrieval.
4A docker push translates to multiple write operations, based on the number of layers that must be pushed. A docker push
includes ReadOps to retrieve a manifest for an existing image.
5 Individual actions of content/delete
, content/read
, content/write
, metadata/read
, metadata/write
corresponds to the limit of Repositories per scope map.
Content Delivery Network limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Azure Content Delivery Network profiles | 25 |
Content Delivery Network endpoints per profile | 25 |
Custom domains per endpoint | 25 |
Maximum origin group per profile | 10 |
Maximum origin per origin group | 10 |
Maximum number of rules per CDN endpoint | 25 |
Maximum number of match conditions per rule | 10 |
Maximum number of actions per rule | 5 |
Maximum bandwidth per profile* | 75 Gbps |
Maximum requests per second per profile | 100,000 |
HTTP header size limit (per header) | 32 KB |
*These two limits are only applicable to Azure CDN Standard from Microsoft (classic). If the traffic is not globally distributed and concentrated in one or two regions, or if a higher quota limit is needed, create an Azure Support request.
A Content Delivery Network subscription can contain one or more Content Delivery Network profiles. A Content Delivery Network profile can contain one or more Content Delivery Network endpoints. You might want to use multiple profiles to organize your Content Delivery Network endpoints by internet domain, web application, or some other criteria.
Data Lake Analytics limits
Azure Data Lake Analytics makes the complex task of managing distributed infrastructure and complex code easy. It dynamically provisions resources, and you can use it to do analytics on exabytes of data. When the job completes, it winds down resources automatically. You pay only for the processing power that was used. As you increase or decrease the size of data stored or the amount of compute used, you don't have to rewrite code. To raise the default limits for your subscription, contact support.
Resource | Limit | Comments |
---|---|---|
Maximum number of concurrent jobs | 20 | |
Maximum number of analytics units (AUs) per account | 250 | Use any combination of up to a maximum of 250 AUs across 20 jobs. To increase this limit, contact Microsoft Support. |
Maximum script size for job submission | 3 MB | |
Maximum number of Data Lake Analytics accounts per region per subscription | 5 | To increase this limit, contact Microsoft Support. |
Data Factory limits
Azure Data Factory is a multitenant service that has the following default limits in place to make sure customer subscriptions are protected from each other's workloads. To raise the limits up to the maximum for your subscription, contact support.
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
Total number of entities, such as pipelines, data sets, triggers, linked services, Private Endpoints, and integration runtimes, within a data factory | 5,000 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Total CPU cores for Azure-SSIS Integration Runtimes under one subscription | 64 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Concurrent pipeline runs per data factory that's shared among all pipelines in the factory | 10,000 | 10,000 |
Concurrent External activity runs per subscription per Azure Integration Runtime region External activities are managed on integration runtime but execute on linked services, including Databricks, stored procedure, Web, and others. This limit doesn't apply to Self-hosted IR. |
3,000 | 3,000 |
Concurrent Pipeline activity runs per subscription per Azure Integration Runtime region Pipeline activities execute on integration runtime, including Lookup, GetMetadata, and Delete. This limit doesn't apply to Self-hosted IR. |
1,000 | 1,000 |
Concurrent authoring operations per subscription per Azure Integration Runtime region Including test connection, browse folder list and table list, preview data. This limit doesn't apply to Self-hosted IR. |
200 | 200 |
Concurrent Data Integration Units1 consumption per subscription per Azure Integration Runtime region | Region group 12: 6,000 Region group 22: 3,000 Region group 32: 1,500 |
Region group 12: 6,000 Region group 22: 3,000 Region group 32: 1,500 |
Concurrent Data Integration Units1 consumption per subscription per Azure Integration Runtime region in managed virtual network | 2,400 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Maximum activities per pipeline, which includes inner activities for containers | 80 | 120 |
Maximum number of linked integration runtimes that can be created against a single self-hosted integration runtime | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of nodes that can be created against a single self-hosted integration runtime | 4 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Maximum parameters per pipeline | 50 | 50 |
ForEach items | 100,000 | 100,000 |
ForEach parallelism | 20 | 50 |
Maximum queued runs per pipeline | 100 | 100 |
Characters per expression | 8,192 | 8,192 |
Minimum tumbling window trigger interval | 5 min | 15 min |
Minimum timeout for pipeline activity runs | 10 min | 10 min |
Maximum timeout for pipeline activity runs | 7 days | 7 days |
Bytes per object for pipeline objects3 | 200 KB | 200 KB |
Bytes per object for dataset and linked service objects3 | 100 KB | 2,000 KB |
Bytes per payload for each activity run4 | 896 KB | 896 KB |
Data Integration Units1 per copy activity run | 256 | 256 |
Write API calls | 1,200/h | 1,200/h This limit is imposed by Azure Resource Manager, not Azure Data Factory. |
Read API calls | 12,500/h | 12,500/h This limit is imposed by Azure Resource Manager, not Azure Data Factory. |
Monitoring queries per minute | 1,000 | 1,000 |
Maximum time of data flow debug session | 8 hrs | 8 hrs |
Concurrent number of data flows per integration runtime | 50 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Concurrent number of data flows per integration runtime in managed vNet | 50 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Concurrent number of data flow debug sessions per user per factory | 3 | 3 |
Data Flow Azure IR TTL limit | 4 hrs | 4 hrs |
Meta Data Entity Size limit in a factory | 2 GB | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
1 The data integration unit (DIU) is used in a cloud-to-cloud copy operation. Learn more from Data integration units (version 2). For information on billing, see Azure Data Factory pricing.
2 Azure Integration Runtime is globally available to ensure data compliance, efficiency, and reduced network egress costs.
Region group | Regions |
---|---|
Region group 1 | Central US, East US, East US 2, North Europe, West Europe, West US, West US 2 |
Region group 2 | Australia East, Australia Southeast, Brazil South, Central India, Japan East, North Central US, South Central US, Southeast Asia, West Central US |
Region group 3 | Other regions |
If managed virtual network is enabled, the data integration unit (DIU) in all region groups are 2,400.
3 Pipeline, data set, and linked service objects represent a logical grouping of your workload. Limits for these objects don't relate to the amount of data you can move and process with Azure Data Factory. Data Factory is designed to scale to handle petabytes of data.
4 The payload for each activity run includes the activity configuration, the associated dataset(s) and linked service(s) configurations if any, and a small portion of system properties generated per activity type. Limit for this payload size doesn't relate to the amount of data you can move and process with Azure Data Factory. Learn about the symptoms and recommendation if you hit this limit.
Web service call limits
Azure Resource Manager has limits for API calls. You can make API calls at a rate within the Azure Resource Manager API limits.
Data Lake Storage limits
Azure Data Lake Storage Gen2 is not a dedicated service or storage account type. It is the latest release of capabilities that are dedicated to big data analytics. These capabilities are available in a general-purpose v2 or BlockBlobStorage storage account, and you can obtain them by enabling the Hierarchical namespace feature of the account. For scale targets, see these articles.
Azure Data Lake Storage Gen1 is a dedicated service. It's an enterprise-wide hyper-scale repository for big data analytic workloads. You can use Data Lake Storage Gen1 to capture data of any size, type, and ingestion speed in one single place for operational and exploratory analytics. There's no limit to the amount of data you can store in a Data Lake Storage Gen1 account.
Resource | Limit | Comments |
---|---|---|
Maximum number of Data Lake Storage Gen1 accounts, per subscription, per region | 10 | To request an increase for this limit, contact support. |
Maximum number of access ACLs, per file or folder | 32 | This is a hard limit. Use groups to manage access with fewer entries. |
Maximum number of default ACLs, per file or folder | 32 | This is a hard limit. Use groups to manage access with fewer entries. |
Data Share limits
Azure Data Share enables organizations to simply and securely share data with their customers and partners.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Maximum number of Data Share resources per Azure subscription | 100 |
Maximum number of sent shares per Data Share resource | 200 |
Maximum number of received shares per Data Share resource | 100 |
Maximum number of invitations per sent share | 200 |
Maximum number of share subscriptions per sent share | 200 |
Maximum number of datasets per share | 200 |
Maximum number of snapshot schedules per share | 1 |
Database Migration Service Limits
Azure Database Migration Service is a fully managed service designed to enable seamless migrations from multiple database sources to Azure data platforms with minimal downtime.
Resource | Limit | Comments |
---|---|---|
Maximum number of services per subscription, per region | 10 | To request an increase for this limit, contact support. |
Device Update for IoT Hub limits
Note
When a given resource or operation doesn't have adjustable limits, the default and the maximum limits are the same. When the limit can be adjusted, the following table includes both the default limit and maximum limit. The limit can be raised above the default limit but not above the maximum limit. Limits can only be adjusted for the Standard SKU. Limit adjustment requests are not accepted for Free SKU. Limit adjustment requests are evaluated on a case-by-case basis and approvals are not guaranteed. Additionally, Free SKU instances cannot be upgraded to Standard SKU instances.
If you want to raise the limit or quota above the default limit, open an online customer support request.
This table provides the limits for the Device Update for IoT Hub resource in Azure Resource Manager:
Resource | Standard SKU Limit | Free SKU Limit | Adjustable for Standard SKU? |
---|---|---|---|
Accounts per subscription | 50 | 1 | No |
Instances per account | 50 | 1 | No |
Length of account name | 3-24 characters | 3-24 characters | No |
Length of instance name | 3-36 characters | 3-36 characters | No |
This table provides the various limits associated with the operations within Device Update for IoT Hub:
Operation | Standard SKU Limit | Free SKU Limit | Adjustable for Standard SKU? |
---|---|---|---|
Number of devices per instance | 1 Million | 10 | Yes |
Number of device groups per instance | 100 | 10 | Yes |
Number of device classes per instance | 80 | 10 | Yes |
Number of active deployments per instance | 50 (includes 1 reserved deployment for Cancels) | 5 (includes 1 reserved deployment for Cancels) | Yes |
Number of total deployments per instance (includes all active, inactive and cancelled deployments that are not deleted) | 100 | 20 | No |
Number of update providers per instance | 25 | 2 | No |
Number of update names per provider per instance | 25 | 2 | No |
Number of update versions per update provider and name per instance | 100 | 5 | No |
Total number of updates per instance | 100 | 10 | No |
Maximum single update file size | 2 GB | 2 GB | Yes |
Maximum combined size of all files in a single import action | 2 GB | 2 GB | Yes |
Maximum number of files in a single update | 10 | 10 | No |
Total data storage included per instance | 100 GB | 5 GB | No |
Note
Cancelled or Inactive deployments count towards your total deployment limit. Please ensure that these deployments are periodically cleaned up, so that you are not prevented from creating new deployments.
Digital Twins limits
Note
Some areas of this service have adjustable limits, and others do not. This is represented in the following tables with the Adjustable? column. When the limit can be adjusted, the Adjustable? value is Yes.
Functional limits
The following table lists the functional limits of Azure Digital Twins.
Area | Capability | Default limit | Adjustable? |
---|---|---|---|
Azure resource | Number of Azure Digital Twins instances in a region, per subscription | 10 | Yes |
Digital twins | Number of twins in an Azure Digital Twins instance | 2,000,000 | Yes |
Digital twins | Number of digital twins that can be imported in a single Import Jobs API job | 2,000,000 | No |
Digital twins | Number of incoming relationships to a single twin | 50,000 | No |
Digital twins | Number of outgoing relationships from a single twin | 50,000 | No |
Digital twins | Total number of relationships in an Azure Digital Twins instance | 20,000,000 | Yes |
Digital twins | Number of relationships that can be imported in a single Import Jobs API job | 10,000,000 | No |
Digital twins | Maximum size (of JSON body in a PUT or PATCH request) of a single twin | 32 KB | No |
Digital twins | Maximum request payload size | 32 KB | No |
Digital twins | Maximum size of a string property value (UTF-8) | 4 KB | No |
Digital twins | Maximum size of a property name | 1 KB | No |
Routing | Number of endpoints for a single Azure Digital Twins instance | 6 | No |
Routing | Number of routes for a single Azure Digital Twins instance | 6 | Yes |
Models | Number of models within a single Azure Digital Twins instance | 10,000 | Yes |
Models | Number of models that can be imported in a single API call (not using the Import Jobs API) | 250 | No |
Models | Number of models that can be imported in a single Import Jobs API job | 10,000 | No |
Models | Maximum size (of JSON body in a PUT or PATCH request) of a single model | 1 MB | No |
Models | Number of items returned in a single page | 100 | No |
Query | Number of items returned in a single page | 1000 | Yes |
Query | Number of AND / OR expressions in a query |
50 | Yes |
Query | Number of array items in an IN / NOT IN clause |
50 | Yes |
Query | Number of characters in a query | 8,000 | Yes |
Query | Number of JOINS in a query |
5 | Yes |
Rate limits
The following table reflects the rate limits of different APIs.
API | Capability | Default limit | Adjustable? |
---|---|---|---|
Jobs API | Number of requests per second | 1 | Yes |
Jobs API | Number of bulk jobs running concurrently (including import and delete) | 1 | Yes |
Models API | Number of requests per second | 100 | Yes |
Digital Twins API | Number of read requests per second | 1,000 | Yes |
Digital Twins API | Number of patch requests per second | 1,000 | Yes |
Digital Twins API | Number of create/delete operations per second across all twins and relationships | 500 | Yes |
Digital Twins API | Number of create/update/delete operations per second on a single twin or its incoming/outgoing relationships | 10 | No |
Digital Twins API | Number of outstanding operations on a single twin or its incoming/outgoing relationships | 500 | No |
Query API | Number of requests per second | 500 | Yes |
Query API | Query Units per second | 4,000 | Yes |
Event Routes API | Number of requests per second | 100 | Yes |
Other limits
Limits on data types and fields within DTDL documents for Azure Digital Twins models can be found within its spec documentation in GitHub: Digital Twins Definition Language (DTDL) - version 2.
Query latency details are described in Query language. Limitations of particular query language features can be found in the query reference documentation.
Event Grid limits
Note
The following limits listed in this article are per region.
Event Grid throttle limits
Event Grid offers a standard tier and basic tier. Event Grid standard tier enables pub-sub using Message Queuing Telemetry Transport (MQTT) broker functionality and pull-delivery of messages through the Event Grid namespace. Event Grid basic tier enables push delivery using Event Grid custom topics, Event Grid system topics, Event domains, and Event Grid partner topics. See Choose the right Event Grid tier. This article describes the quota and limits for both tiers.
Event Grid Namespace resource limits
Azure Event Grid namespaces enables MQTT messaging, and HTTP pull delivery. The following limits apply to namespace resources in Azure Event Grid.
Limit description | Limit |
---|---|
Event Grid namespaces per Azure subscription | 50 |
Maximum throughput units per Event Grid namespace | 40 |
IP Firewall rules per Event Grid namespace | 16 |
MQTT limits in Event Grid namespace
The following limits apply to MQTT in Azure Event Grid namespace resource.
Note
Throughput units (TUs) define the ingress and egress event rate capacity in namespaces. They allow you to control the capacity of your namespace resource for message ingress and egress.
Limit description | Limit |
---|---|
MQTT sessions per Event Grid namespace | 10,000 per throughput unit (TU) |
Sessions per Event Grid namespace | 10,000 per TU |
Session Expiry Interval | 8 hours, configurable on the Event Grid namespace |
Inbound MQTT publishing requests per Event Grid namespace | 1,000 messages per second per TU |
Inbound MQTT bandwidth per Event Grid namespace | 1 MB per second per TU |
Inbound MQTT publishing requests per session | 100 messages per second |
Inbound MQTT bandwidth per session | 1 MB per second |
Inbound in-flight MQTT messages* | 100 messages |
Inbound in-flight MQTT bandwidth* | 64 KB |
Outbound MQTT publishing requests per Event Grid namespace | 1,000 messages per second per TU |
Outbound MQTT bandwidth per Event Grid namespace | 1 MB per second per TU |
Outbound MQTT publishing requests per session | 100 messages per second |
Outbound MQTT bandwidth per session | 1 MB per second |
Outbound in-flight MQTT messages* | 100 messages |
Outbound in-flight MQTT bandwidth* | 64 KB |
Max message size | 512 KB |
Segments per topic/ topic filter | 8 |
Topic size | 256 B |
MQTTv5 response topic | 256 B |
MQTTv5 topic aliases | 10 per session |
MQTTv5 total size of all user properties | 32 KB |
MQTTv5 content type size | 256 B |
MQTTv5 correlation data size | 256 B |
Connect requests | 200 requests per second per TU |
MQTTv5 authentication data size | 8 KB |
Maximum keep-alive interval | 1160 |
Topic filters per MQTT SUBSCRIBE packet | 10 |
Subscribe and unsubscribe requests per Event Grid namespace | 200 requests per second |
Subscribe and unsubscribe requests per session | 5 requests per second |
Subscriptions per MQTT session | 50 |
Subscriptions per Event Grid namespace | 1 million |
Subscriptions per MQTT topic | Unlimited, as long as they don't exceed the limit for subscriptions per Event Grid namespace or session |
Registered client resources | 10,000 clients per TU |
CA certificates | 10 |
Client groups | 10 |
Topic spaces | 10 |
Topic templates | 10 per topic space |
Permission bindings | 100 |
* For MQTTv5, learn more about flow control support.
Events limits in Event Grid namespace
The following limits apply to events in Azure Event Grid namespace resource.
Limit description | Limit |
---|---|
Event Grid namespace topics | 100 per TU |
Event ingress | 1,000 events per second or 1 MB per second per TU (whichever comes first) |
Event egress (push and pull APIs) | Up to 2,000 events per second or 2 MB per second per TU |
Event egress (acknowledge, release, reject, and renew lock APIs) | Up to 2,000 events per second or 2 MB per second per TU |
Maximum event retention on Event Grid namespace topics | 7 days |
Subscriptions per topic | 500 |
Maximum event size | 1 MB |
Batch size | 1 MB |
Events per request | 1,000 |
Custom topic, system topic, and partner topic resource limits
The following limits apply to Azure Event Grid custom topic, system topic, and partner topic resources.
Limit description | Limit |
---|---|
Custom topics per Azure subscription | 100 When the limit is reached, you can consider a different region or consider using domains, which can support 100,000 topics. |
Event subscriptions per topic | 500 This limit can’t be increased. |
Publish rate for a custom or a partner topic (ingress) | 5,000 events or 5 MB per second (whichever comes first). An event is counted for limits and pricing purposes as a 64KB data chunk. So, if the event is 128 KB, it counts as two events. |
Event size | 1 MB This limit can’t be increased. |
Maximum event retention on topics | 1 day. This limit can't be increased. |
Number of incoming events per batch | 5,000 This limit can’t be increased |
Private endpoint connections per topic | 64 This limit can’t be increased |
IP Firewall rules per topic | 128 |
Domain resource limits
The following limits apply to Azure Event Grid domain resource.
Limit description | Limit |
---|---|
Domains per Azure subscription | 100 |
Topics per domain | 100,000 |
Event subscriptions per topic within a domain | 500 This limit can’t be increased |
Domain scope event subscriptions | 50 This limit can’t be increased |
Publish rate for a domain (ingress) | 5,000 events or 5 MB per second (whichever comes first). An event is counted for limits and pricing purposes as a 64KB data chunk. So, if the event is 128 KB, it counts as two events. |
Maximum event retention on domain topics | 1 day. This limit can't be increased. |
Private endpoint connections per domain | 64 |
IP Firewall rules per topic | 128 |
Event Hubs limits
The following tables provide quotas and limits specific to Azure Event Hubs. For information about Event Hubs pricing, see Event Hubs pricing.
Common limits for all tiers
The following limits are common across all tiers.
Limit | Notes | Value |
---|---|---|
Size of an event hub name | - | 256 characters |
Size of a consumer group name | Kafka protocol doesn't require the creation of a consumer group. | Kafka: 256 characters AMQP: 50 characters |
Number of non-epoch receivers per consumer group | - | 5 |
Number of authorization rules per namespace | Subsequent requests for authorization rule creation are rejected. | 12 |
Number of calls to the GetRuntimeInformation method | - | 50 per second |
Number of virtual networks (VNet) | - | 128 |
Number of IP Config rules | - | 128 |
Maximum length of a schema group name | 50 | |
Maximum length of a schema name | 100 | |
Size in bytes per schema | 1 MB | |
Number of properties per schema group | 1024 | |
Size in bytes per schema group property key | 256 | |
Size in bytes per schema group property value | 1024 |
Basic vs. standard vs. premium vs. dedicated tiers
The following table shows limits that are different for Basic, Standard, Premium, and Dedicated tiers.
Note
- In the table, CU is capacity unit, PU is processing unit, and TU is throughput unit.
- You can configure TUs for a Basic or Standard tier namespace or PUs for a Premium tier namespace.
- When you create a dedicated cluster, one CU is assigned to the cluster. If you enable the Support scaling option while you create the cluster, you can scale out by increasing CUs or scale in by decreasing CUs for the cluster yourself. For step-by-step instructions, see Scale dedicated cluster. For clusters that don't support the Support scaling feature, submit a ticket to adjust CUs for the cluster.
Limit | Basic | Standard | Premium | Dedicated |
---|---|---|---|---|
Maximum size of Event Hubs publication | 256 KB | 1 MB | 1 MB | 1 MB |
Number of consumer groups per event hub | 1 | 20 | 100 | 1,000 No limit per CU |
Number of Kafka consumer groups per namespace | NA | 1,000 | 1,000 | 1,000 |
Number of brokered connections per namespace | 100 | 5,000 | 10,000 per PU For example, if the namespace is assigned 3 PUs, the limit is 30,000. |
100,000 per CU |
Maximum retention period of event data | 1 day | 7 days | 90 days | 90 days |
Event storage for retention | 84 GB per TU | 84 GB per TU | 1 TB per PU | 10 TB per CU |
Maximum TUs or PUs or CUs | 40 TUs | 40 TUs | 16 PUs | 20 CUs |
Number of partitions per event hub | 32 | 32 | 100 per event hub, but there's a limit of 200 per PU at the namespace level. For example, if a namespace is assigned 2 PUs, the limit for total number of partitions in all event hubs in the namespace is 2 * 200 = 400. |
1,024 per event hub 2,000 per CU |
Number of namespaces per subscription | 1,000 | 1,000 | 1,000 | 1,000 (50 per CU) |
Number of event hubs per namespace | 10 | 10 | 100 per PU | 1,000 |
Capture | N/A | Pay per hour | Included | Included |
Size of compacted event hub | N/A | 1 GB per partition | 250 GB per partition | 250 GB per partition |
Size of the schema registry (namespace) in megabytes | N/A | 25 | 100 | 1,024 |
Number of schema groups in a schema registry or namespace | N/A | 1: excluding the default group | 100 1 MB per schema |
1,000 1 MB per schema |
Number of schema versions across all schema groups | N/A | 25 | 1,000 | 10,000 |
Throughput per unit | Ingress: 1 MB/sec or 1000 events per second Egress: 2 MB/sec or 4,096 events per second |
Ingress: 1 MB/sec or 1,000 events per second Egress: 2 MB/sec or 4,096 events per second |
No limits per PU * | No limits per CU * |
* Depends on factors such as resource allocation, number of partitions, and storage.
Note
You can publish events individually or batched. The publication limit (according to SKU) applies regardless of whether it's a single event or a batch. Publishing events larger than the maximum threshold will be rejected.
IoT Central limits
IoT Central limits the number of applications you can deploy in a subscription to 100. To learn more, see Azure IoT Central quota and limits.
IoT Hub limits
The following table lists the limits associated with the different service tiers S1, S2, S3, and F1. For information about the cost of each unit in each tier, see Azure IoT Hub pricing.
Resource | S1 Standard | S2 Standard | S3 Standard | F1 Free |
---|---|---|---|---|
Messages/day | 400,000 | 6,000,000 | 300,000,000 | 8,000 |
Maximum units | 200 | 200 | 10 | 1 |
The following table lists the limits that apply to IoT Hub resources.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Maximum paid IoT hubs per Azure subscription | 50 |
Maximum free IoT hubs per Azure subscription | 1 |
Maximum number of characters in a device ID | 128 |
Maximum number of device identities returned in a single call |
1,000 |
IoT Hub message maximum retention for device-to-cloud messages | 7 days |
Maximum size of device-to-cloud message | 256 KB |
Maximum size of device-to-cloud batch | AMQP and HTTP: 256 KB for the entire batch MQTT: 256 KB for each message |
Maximum messages in device-to-cloud batch | 500 |
Maximum size of cloud-to-device message | 64 KB |
Maximum TTL for cloud-to-device messages | 2 days |
Maximum delivery count for cloud-to-device messages |
100 |
Maximum cloud-to-device queue depth per device | 50 |
Maximum delivery count for feedback messages in response to a cloud-to-device message |
100 |
Maximum TTL for feedback messages in response to a cloud-to-device message |
2 days |
Maximum size of device twin | 8 KB for tags section, and 32 KB for desired and reported properties sections each |
Maximum length of device twin string key | 1 KB |
Maximum length of device twin string value | 4 KB |
Maximum depth of object in device twin | 10 |
Maximum size of direct method payload | 128 KB |
Job history maximum retention | 30 days |
Maximum concurrent jobs | 10 (for S3), 5 for (S2), 1 (for S1) |
Maximum additional endpoints (beyond built-in endpoints) | 10 (for S1, S2, and S3) |
Maximum message routing rules | 100 (for S1, S2, and S3) |
Maximum number of concurrently connected device streams | 50 (for S1, S2, S3, and F1 only) |
Maximum device stream data transfer | 300 MB per day (for S1, S2, S3, and F1 only) |
Note
The total number of devices plus modules that can be registered to a single IoT hub is capped at 1,000,000.
IoT Hub throttles requests when the following quotas are exceeded.
Throttle | Per-hub value |
---|---|
Identity registry operations (create, retrieve, list, update, and delete), individual or bulk import/export |
83.33/sec/unit (5,000/min/unit) (for S3). 1.67/sec/unit (100/min/unit) (for S1 and S2). |
Device connections | 6,000/sec/unit (for S3), 120/sec/unit (for S2), 12/sec/unit (for S1). Minimum of 100/sec. |
Device-to-cloud sends | 6,000/sec/unit (for S3), 120/sec/unit (for S2), 12/sec/unit (for S1). Minimum of 100/sec. |
Cloud-to-device sends | 83.33/sec/unit (5,000/min/unit) (for S3), 1.67/sec/unit (100/min/unit) (for S1 and S2). |
Cloud-to-device receives | 833.33/sec/unit (50,000/min/unit) (for S3), 16.67/sec/unit (1,000/min/unit) (for S1 and S2). |
File upload operations | 83.33 file upload initiations/sec/unit (5,000/min/unit) (for S3), 1.67 file upload initiations/sec/unit (100/min/unit) (for S1 and S2). 10 concurrent file uploads per device. |
Direct methods | 24 MB/sec/unit (for S3), 480 KB/sec/unit (for S2), 160 KB/sec/unit (for S1). Based on 8-KB throttling meter size. |
Device twin reads | 500/sec/unit (for S3), Maximum of 100/sec or 10/sec/unit (for S2), 100/sec (for S1) |
Device twin updates | 250/sec/unit (for S3), Maximum of 50/sec or 5/sec/unit (for S2), 50/sec (for S1) |
Jobs operations (create, update, list, and delete) |
83.33/sec/unit (5,000/min/unit) (for S3), 1.67/sec/unit (100/min/unit) (for S2), 1.67/sec/unit (100/min/unit) (for S1). |
Jobs per-device operation throughput | 50/sec/unit (for S3), maximum of 10/sec or 1/sec/unit (for S2), 10/sec (for S1). |
Device stream initiation rate | 5 new streams/sec (for S1, S2, S3, and F1 only). |
IoT Hub Device Provisioning Service limits
The following table lists the limits that apply to Azure IoT Hub Device Provisioning Service resources.
Resource | Limit | Adjustable? |
---|---|---|
Maximum device provisioning services per Azure subscription | 10 | No |
Maximum number of registrations | 1,000,000 | No |
Maximum number of individual enrollments | 1,000,000 | No |
Maximum number of enrollment groups (X.509 certificate) | 100 | No |
Maximum number of enrollment groups (symmetric key) | 100 | No |
Maximum number of CAs | 25 | No |
Maximum number of linked IoT hubs | 50 | No |
Maximum size of message | 96 KB | No |
Tip
If the hard limit on symmetric key enrollment groups is a blocking issue, it is recommended to use individual enrollments as a workaround.
The Device Provisioning Service has the following rate limits.
Rate | Per-unit value | Adjustable? |
---|---|---|
Operations | 1,000/min/service | No |
Device registrations | 1,000/min/service | No |
Device polling operation | 5/10 sec/device | No |
Key Vault limits
Azure Key Vault service supports two resource types: Vaults and Managed HSMs. The following two sections describe the service limits for each of them respectively.
Resource type: vault
This section describes service limits for resource type vaults
.
Key transactions (maximum transactions allowed in 10 seconds, per vault per region1):
Key type | HSM key CREATE key |
HSM key All other transactions |
Software key CREATE key |
Software key All other transactions |
---|---|---|---|---|
RSA 2,048-bit | 10 | 2,000 | 20 | 4,000 |
RSA 3,072-bit | 10 | 500 | 20 | 1,000 |
RSA 4,096-bit | 10 | 250 | 20 | 500 |
ECC P-256 | 10 | 2,000 | 20 | 4,000 |
ECC P-384 | 10 | 2,000 | 20 | 4,000 |
ECC P-521 | 10 | 2,000 | 20 | 4,000 |
ECC SECP256K1 | 10 | 2,000 | 20 | 4,000 |
Note
In the previous table, we see that for RSA 2,048-bit software keys, 4,000 GET transactions per 10 seconds are allowed. For RSA 2,048-bit HSM-keys, 2,000 GET transactions per 10 seconds are allowed.
The throttling thresholds are weighted, and enforcement is on their sum. For example, as shown in the previous table, when you perform GET operations on RSA HSM-keys, it's eight times more expensive to use 4,096-bit keys compared to 2,048-bit keys. That's because 2,000/250 = 8.
In a given 10-second interval, an Azure Key Vault client can do only one of the following operations before it encounters a 429
throttling HTTP status code:
- 4,000 RSA 2,048-bit software-key GET transactions
- 2,000 RSA 2,048-bit HSM-key GET transactions
- 250 RSA 4,096-bit HSM-key GET transactions
- 248 RSA 4,096-bit HSM-key GET transactions and 16 RSA 2,048-bit HSM-key GET transactions
Secrets, managed storage account keys, and vault transactions:
Transactions type | Maximum transactions allowed in 10 seconds, per vault per region1 |
---|---|
Secret CREATE secret |
300 |
All other transactions | 4,000 |
For information on how to handle throttling when these limits are exceeded, see Azure Key Vault throttling guidance.
1 A subscription-wide limit for all transaction types is five times per key vault limit.
Backup keys, secrets, certificates
When you back up a key vault object, such as a secret, key, or certificate, the backup operation will download the object as an encrypted blob. This blob cannot be decrypted outside of Azure. To get usable data from this blob, you must restore the blob into a key vault within the same Azure subscription and Azure geography
Transactions type | Maximum key vault object versions allowed |
---|---|
Back up individual key, secret, certificate | 500 |
Note
Attempting to backup a key, secret, or certificate object with more versions than above limit will result in an error. It is not possible to delete previous versions of a key, secret, or certificate.
Limits on count of keys, secrets and certificates:
Key Vault does not restrict the number of keys, secrets or certificates that can be stored in a vault. The transaction limits on the vault should be taken into account to ensure that operations are not throttled.
Key Vault does not restrict the number of versions on a secret, key or certificate, but storing a large number of versions (500+) can impact the performance of backup operations. See Azure Key Vault Backup.
Resource type: Managed HSM
This section describes service limits for resource type managed HSM
.
Object limits
Item | Limits |
---|---|
Number of HSM instances per subscription per region | 5 |
Number of keys per HSM instance | 5000 |
Number of versions per key | 100 |
Number of custom role definitions per HSM instance | 50 |
Number of role assignments at HSM scope | 50 |
Number of role assignments at each individual key scope | 10 |
Transaction limits for administrative operations (number of operations per second per HSM instance)
Operation | Number of operations per second |
---|---|
All RBAC operations (includes all CRUD operations for role definitions and role assignments) |
5 |
Full HSM Backup/Restore (only one concurrent backup or restore operation per HSM instance supported) |
1 |
Transaction limits for cryptographic operations (number of operations per second per HSM instance)
- Each Managed HSM instance constitutes three load balanced HSM partitions. The throughput limits are a function of underlying hardware capacity allocated for each partition. The tables below show maximum throughput with at least one partition available. Actual throughput may be up to 3x higher if all three partitions are available.
- Throughput limits noted assume that one single key is being used to achieve maximum throughput. For example, if a single RSA-2048 key is used the maximum throughput will be 1100 sign operations. If you use 1100 different keys with one transaction per second each, they will not be able to achieve the same throughput.
RSA key operations (number of operations per second per HSM instance)
Operation | 2048-bit | 3072-bit | 4096-bit |
---|---|---|---|
Create Key | 1 | 1 | 1 |
Delete Key (soft-delete) | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Purge Key | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Backup Key | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Restore Key | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Get Key Information | 1100 | 1100 | 1100 |
Encrypt | 10000 | 10000 | 6000 |
Decrypt | 1100 | 360 | 160 |
Wrap | 10000 | 10000 | 6000 |
Unwrap | 1100 | 360 | 160 |
Sign | 1100 | 360 | 160 |
Verify | 10000 | 10000 | 6000 |
EC key operations (number of operations per second per HSM instance)
This table describes number of operations per second for each curve type.
Operation | P-256 | P-256K | P-384 | P-521 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Create Key | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
Delete Key (soft-delete) | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Purge Key | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Backup Key | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Restore Key | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Get Key Information | 1100 | 1100 | 1100 | 1100 |
Sign | 260 | 260 | 165 | 56 |
Verify | 130 | 130 | 82 | 28 |
AES key operations (number of operations per second per HSM instance)
- Encrypt and Decrypt operations assume a 4KB packet size.
- Throughput limits for Encrypt/Decrypt apply to AES-CBC and AES-GCM algorithms.
- Throughput limits for Wrap/Unwrap apply to AES-KW algorithm.
Operation | 128-bit | 192-bit | 256-bit |
---|---|---|---|
Create Key | 1 | 1 | 1 |
Delete Key (soft-delete) | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Purge Key | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Backup Key | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Restore Key | 10 | 10 | 10 |
Get Key Information | 1100 | 1100 | 1100 |
Encrypt | 8000 | 8000 | 8000 |
Decrypt | 8000 | 8000 | 8000 |
Wrap | 9000 | 9000 | 9000 |
Unwrap | 9000 | 9000 | 9000 |
Managed identity limits
Each managed identity counts towards the object quota limit in a Microsoft Entra tenant as described in Microsoft Entra service limits and restrictions.
The rate at which managed identities can be created have the following limits:
- Per Microsoft Entra tenant per Azure region: 400 create operations per 20 seconds.
- Per Azure Subscription per Azure region : 80 create operations per 20 seconds.
The rate at which a user-assigned managed identity can be assigned with an Azure resource :
- Per Microsoft Entra tenant per Azure region: 400 assignment operations per 20 seconds.
- Per Azure Subscription per Azure region : 300 assignment operations per 20 seconds.
Media Services limits
Note
For resources that aren't fixed, open a support ticket to ask for an increase in the quotas. Don't create additional Azure Media Services accounts in an attempt to obtain higher limits.
Account limits
Resource | Default Limit |
---|---|
Media Services accounts in a single subscription | 100 (fixed) |
Asset limits
Resource | Default Limit |
---|---|
Assets per Media Services account | 1,000,000 |
Storage (media) limits
Resource | Default Limit |
---|---|
File size | In some scenarios, there is a limit on the maximum file size supported for processing in Media Services. (1) |
Storage accounts | 100(2) (fixed) |
1 The maximum size supported for a single blob is currently up to 5 TB in Azure Blob Storage. Additional limits apply in Media Services based on the VM sizes that are used by the service. The size limit applies to the files that you upload and also the files that get generated as a result of Media Services processing (encoding or analyzing). If your source file is larger than 260-GB, your Job will likely fail.
2 The storage accounts must be from the same Azure subscription.
Jobs (encoding & analyzing) limits
Resource | Default Limit |
---|---|
Jobs per Media Services account | 500,000 (3) (fixed) |
Job inputs per Job | 50 (fixed) |
Job outputs per Job | 20 (fixed) |
Transforms per Media Services account | 100 (fixed) |
Transform outputs in a Transform | 20 (fixed) |
Files per job input | 10 (fixed) |
3 This number includes queued, finished, active, and canceled Jobs. It does not include deleted Jobs.
Any Job record in your account older than 90 days will be automatically deleted, even if the total number of records is below the maximum quota.
Live streaming limits
Resource | Default Limit |
---|---|
Live Events (4) per Media Services account | 5 |
Live Outputs per Live Event | 3 (5) |
Max Live Output duration | Size of the DVR window |
4 For detailed information about Live Event limitations, see Live Event types comparison and limitations.
5 Live Outputs start on creation and stop when deleted.
Packaging & delivery limits
Resource | Default Limit |
---|---|
Streaming Endpoints (stopped or running) per Media Services account | 2 |
Dynamic Manifest Filters | 100 |
Streaming Policies | 100 (6) |
Unique Streaming Locators associated with an Asset at one time | 100(7) (fixed) |
6 When using a custom Streaming Policy, you should design a limited set of such policies for your Media Service account, and re-use them for your StreamingLocators whenever the same encryption options and protocols are needed. You should not be creating a new Streaming Policy for each Streaming Locator.
7 Streaming Locators are not designed for managing per-user access control. To give different access rights to individual users, use Digital Rights Management (DRM) solutions.
Protection limits
Resource | Default Limit |
---|---|
Options per Content Key Policy | 30 |
Licenses per month for each of the DRM types on Media Services key delivery service per account | 1,000,000 |
Support ticket
For resources that are not fixed, you may ask for the quotas to be raised, by opening a support ticket. Include detailed information in the request on the desired quota changes, use-case scenarios, and regions required.
Do not create additional Azure Media Services accounts in an attempt to obtain higher limits.
Media Services v2 (legacy)
For limits specific to Media Services v2 (legacy), see [Media Services v2 (legacy)]
Mobile Services limits
Tier | Free | Basic | Standard |
---|---|---|---|
API calls | 500,000 | 1.5 million per unit | 15 million per unit |
Active devices | 500 | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Scale | N/A | Up to 6 units | Unlimited units |
Push notifications | Azure Notification Hubs Free tier included, up to 1 million pushes | Notification Hubs Basic tier included, up to 10 million pushes | Notification Hubs Standard tier included, up to 10 million pushes |
Real-time messaging/ WebSockets |
Limited | 350 per mobile service | Unlimited |
Offline synchronizations | Limited | Included | Included |
Scheduled jobs | Limited | Included | Included |
Azure SQL Database (required) Standard rates apply for additional capacity |
20 MB included | 20 MB included | 20 MB included |
CPU capacity | 60 minutes per day | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Outbound data transfer | 165 MB per day (daily rollover) | Included | Included |
For more information on limits and pricing, see Azure Mobile Services pricing.
Multifactor authentication limits
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
Maximum number of trusted IP addresses or ranges per subscription | 0 | 50 |
Remember my devices, number of days | 14 | 60 |
Maximum number of app passwords | 0 | No limit |
Allow X attempts during MFA call | 1 | 99 |
Two-way text message timeout seconds | 60 | 600 |
Default one-time bypass seconds | 300 | 1,800 |
Lock user account after X consecutive MFA denials | Not set | 99 |
Reset account lockout counter after X minutes | Not set | 9,999 |
Unlock account after X minutes | Not set | 9,999 |
Networking limits
Networking limits - Azure Resource Manager
The following limits apply only for networking resources managed through Azure Resource Manager per region per subscription. Learn how to view your current resource usage against your subscription limits.
Note
We have increased all default limits to their maximum limits. If there's no maximum limit column, the resource doesn't have adjustable limits. If you had these limits manually increased by support in the past and are currently seeing limits lower than what is listed in the following tables, open an online customer support request at no charge
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Virtual networks | 1,000 |
Subnets per virtual network | 3,000 |
Virtual network peerings per virtual network | 500 |
Virtual network gateways (VPN gateways) per virtual network | 1 |
Virtual network gateways (ExpressRoute gateways) per virtual network | 1 |
DNS servers per virtual network | 20 |
Private IP addresses per virtual network | 65,536 |
Total Private Addresses for a group of Peered Virtual networks | 128,000 |
Private IP addresses per network interface | 256 |
Private IP addresses per virtual machine | 256 |
Public IP addresses per network interface | 256 |
Public IP addresses per virtual machine | 256 |
Concurrent TCP or UDP flows per NIC of a virtual machine or role instance | 500,000 |
Network interface cards | 65,536 |
Network Security Groups | 5,000 |
NSG rules per NSG | 1,000 |
IP addresses and ranges specified for source or destination in a security group (The limit applies separately to source and destination) | 4,000 |
Application security groups | 3,000 |
Application security groups per IP configuration, per NIC | 20 |
Application security groups referenced as source/destination per NSG rule | 10 |
IP configurations per application security group | 4,000 |
Application security groups that can be specified within all security rules of a network security group | 100 |
User-defined route tables | 200 |
User-defined routes per route table | 400 |
Point-to-site root certificates per Azure VPN Gateway | 20 |
Point-to-site revoked client certificates per Azure VPN Gateway | 300 |
Virtual network TAPs | 100 |
Network interface TAP configurations per virtual network TAP | 100 |
Public IP address limits
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
Public IP addresses1,2 | 10 for Basic | Contact support |
Static Public IP addresses1 | 10 for Basic | Contact support |
Standard Public IP addresses1 | 10 | Contact support |
Public IP prefixes | limited by number of Standard Public IPs in a subscription | Contact support |
Public IP prefix length | /28 | Contact support |
Custom IP prefixes | 5 | Contact support |
1Default limits for Public IP addresses vary by offer category type, such as Free Trial, Pay-As-You-Go, CSP. For example, the default for Enterprise Agreement subscriptions is 1000.
2Public IP addresses limit refers to the total amount of Public IP addresses, including Basic and Standard.
Load balancer limits
The following limits apply only for networking resources managed through Azure Resource Manager per region per subscription. Learn how to view your current resource usage against your subscription limits.
Standard Load Balancer
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Load balancers | 1,000 |
Frontend IP configurations | 600 |
Rules (Load Balancer + Inbound NAT) per resource | 1,500 |
Rules per NIC (across all IPs on a NIC), rules per IP (IP based LB)1 | 300 |
High-availability ports rule | 1 per internal frontend |
Outbound rules per Load Balancer | 600 |
Backend pool size | 5,000 |
Azure global Load Balancer Backend pool size | 300 |
Backend IP configurations per frontend 2 | 10,000 |
Backend IP configurations across all frontends | 500,000 |
1 Each NIC can have a total of 300 rules (load balancing, inbound NAT, and outbound rules combined) configured across all IP configurations on the NIC. For IP based LBs, this limit is per IP. 2 Backend IP configurations are aggregated across all load balancer rules including load balancing, inbound NAT, and outbound rules. Each rule a backend pool instance is configured to counts as one configuration.
Load Balancer doesn't apply any throughput limits. However, throughput limits for virtual machines and virtual networks still apply. For more information, see Virtual machine network bandwidth.
Gateway Load Balancer
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Resources chained per Load Balancer (LB frontend configurations or VM NIC IP configurations combined) | 100 |
All limits for Standard Load Balancer also apply to Gateway Load Balancer.
Basic Load Balancer
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Load balancers | 1,000 |
Rules per resource | 250 |
Rules per NIC (across all IPs on a NIC) | 300 |
Frontend IP configurations 3 | 200 |
Backend pool size | 300 IP configurations, single availability set |
Availability sets per Load Balancer | 1 |
Load Balancers per VM | 2 (1 Public and 1 internal) |
3 The limit for a single discrete resource in a backend pool (standalone virtual machine, availability set, or virtual machine scale-set placement group) is to have up to 250 Frontend IP configurations across a single Basic Public Load Balancer and Basic Internal Load Balancer.
The following limits apply only for networking resources managed through the classic deployment model per subscription. Learn how to view your current resource usage against your subscription limits.
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
Virtual networks | 100 | 100 |
Local network sites | 20 | 50 |
DNS servers per virtual network | 20 | 20 |
Private IP addresses per virtual network | 4,096 | 4,096 |
Concurrent TCP or UDP flows per NIC of a virtual machine or role instance | 500,000, up to 1,000,000 for two or more NICs. | 500,000, up to 1,000,000 for two or more NICs. |
Network Security Groups (NSGs) | 200 | 200 |
NSG rules per NSG | 200 | 1,000 |
User-defined route tables | 200 | 200 |
User-defined routes per route table | 400 | 400 |
Public IP addresses (dynamic) | 500 | 500 |
Reserved public IP addresses | 500 | 500 |
Public IP per deployment | 5 | Contact support |
Private IP (internal load balancing) per deployment | 1 | 1 |
Endpoint access control lists (ACLs) | 50 | 50 |
Azure Load Balancer limits
Standard Load Balancer
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Load balancers | 1,000 |
Frontend IP configurations | 600 |
Rules (Load Balancer + Inbound NAT) per resource | 1,500 |
Rules per NIC (across all IPs on a NIC)1 | 300 |
High-availability ports rule | 1 per internal frontend |
Outbound rules per Load Balancer | 600 |
Backend pool size | 5,000 |
Azure global Load Balancer Backend pool size | 300 |
Backend IP configurations per frontend 2 | 10,000 |
Backend IP configurations across all frontends | 500,000 |
1 Each NIC can have a total of 300 rules (load balancing, inbound NAT, and outbound rules combined) configured across all IP configurations on the NIC. 2 Backend IP configurations are aggregated across all load balancer rules including load balancing, inbound NAT, and outbound rules. Each rule a backend pool instance is configured to counts as one configuration.
Load Balancer doesn't apply any throughput limits. However, throughput limits for virtual machines and virtual networks still apply. For more information, see Virtual machine network bandwidth.
Gateway Load Balancer
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Resources chained per Load Balancer (LB frontend configurations or VM NIC IP configurations combined) | 100 |
All limits for Standard Load Balancer also apply to Gateway Load Balancer.
Basic Load Balancer
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Load balancers | 1,000 |
Rules per resource | 250 |
Rules per NIC (across all IPs on a NIC) | 300 |
Frontend IP configurations 3 | 200 |
Backend pool size | 300 IP configurations, single availability set |
Availability sets per Load Balancer | 1 |
Load Balancers per VM | 2 (1 Public and 1 internal) |
3 The limit for a single discrete resource in a backend pool (standalone virtual machine, availability set, or virtual machine scale-set placement group) is to have up to 250 Frontend IP configurations across a single Basic Public Load Balancer and Basic Internal Load Balancer.
Application Gateway limits
The following table applies to v1, v2, Standard, and WAF SKUs unless otherwise stated.
Resource | Limit | Note |
---|---|---|
Azure Application Gateway | 1,000 per region per subscription | |
Frontend IP configurations | 2 | 1 public and 1 private |
Frontend ports | 1001 | |
Backend address pools | 100 | |
Backend targets per pool | 1,200 | |
HTTP listeners | 2001 | Limited to 100 active listeners that are routing traffic. Active listeners = total number of listeners - listeners not active. If a default configuration inside a routing rule is set to route traffic (for example, it has a listener, a backend pool, and HTTP settings) then that also counts as a listener. For more information, see Frequently asked questions about Application Gateway. |
HTTP load-balancing rules | 4001 | |
Backend HTTP settings | 1001 | |
Instances per gateway | V1 SKU - 32 V2 SKU - 125 |
|
SSL certificates | 1001 | 1 per HTTP listener |
Maximum SSL certificate size | V1 SKU - 10 KB V2 SKU - 16 KB |
|
Maximum trusted client CA certificate size | 25 KB | 25 KB is the maximum aggregated size of root and intermediate certificates contained in an uploaded pem or cer file. |
Maximum trusted client CA certificates | 200 | 100 per SSL Profile |
Authentication certificates | 100 | |
Trusted root certificates | 100 | |
Request timeout minimum | 1 second | |
Request timeout maximum to private backend | 24 hours | |
Request timeout maximum to external backend | 4 minutes | |
Number of sites | 1001 | 1 per HTTP listener |
URL maps per listener | 1 | |
Host names per listener | 5 | |
Maximum path-based rules per URL map | 100 | |
Redirect configurations | 1001 | |
Number of rewrite rule sets | 400 | |
Number of Header or URL configuration per rewrite rule set | 40 | |
Number of conditions per rewrite rule set | 40 | |
Concurrent WebSocket connections | Medium gateways 20k2 Large gateways 50k2 |
|
Maximum URL length | 32 KB | |
Maximum header size | 32 KB | |
Maximum header field size for HTTP/2 | 8 KB | |
Maximum header size for HTTP/2 | 16 KB | |
Maximum requests per HTTP/2 connection | 1000 | The total number of requests that can share the same frontend HTTP/2 connection |
Maximum file upload size (Standard SKU) | V1 - 2 GB V2 - 4 GB |
This maximum size limit is shared with the request body |
Maximum file upload size (WAF SKU) | V1 Medium - 100 MB V1 Large - 500 MB V2 - 750 MB V2 (with CRS 3.2 or DRS) - 4 GB3 |
1 MB - Minimum Value 100 MB - Default value V2 with CRS 3.2 or DRS - can be turned On/Off |
Maximum request size limit Standard SKU (without files) | V1 - 2 GB V2 - 4 GB |
|
Maximum request size limit WAF SKU (without files) | V1 or V2 (with CRS 3.1 and older) - 128 KB V2 (with CRS 3.2 or DRS) - 2 MB3 |
8 KB - Minimum Value 128 KB - Default value V2 with CRS 3.2 or DRS - can be turned On/Off |
Maximum request inspection limit WAF SKU | V1 or V2 (with CRS 3.1 and older) - 128 KB V2 (with CRS 3.2 or DRS) - 2 MB3 |
8 KB - Minimum Value 128 KB - Default value V2 with CRS 3.2 or DRS - can be turned On/Off |
Maximum Private Link Configurations | 2 | 1 for public IP, 1 for private IP |
Maximum Private Link IP Configurations | 8 | |
Maximum WAF custom rules per WAF policy | 100 | |
WAF IP address ranges per match condition | 540 600 - with CRS 3.2 or DRS |
|
Maximum WAF exclusions per Application Gateway | 40 200 - with CRS 3.2 or DRS |
|
WAF string match values per match condition | 10 |
1 The number of resources listed in the table applies to standard Application Gateway SKUs and WAF-enabled SKUs running CRS 3.2 or DRS. For WAF-enabled SKUs running CRS 3.1 or lower, the supported number is 40. For more information, see WAF engine.
2 Limit is per Application Gateway instance not per Application Gateway resource.
3 Must define the value via WAF Policy for Application Gateway.
Application Gateway for Containers limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Application Gateway for Containers | 1000 per subscription |
Associations | 1 per gateway |
Frontends | 5 per gateway |
Kubernetes Ingress and Gateway API configuration limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Resource naming | 128 characters |
Namespace naming | 128 characters |
Listeners per gateway | 64 listeners per gateway resource (enforced by Gateway API) |
Total AGC references | 5 per ALB controller |
Total certificate references | 100 per AGC |
Total listeners | 200 per AGC |
Total routes | 200 per AGC |
Total rules | 200 per AGC |
Total services | 100 per AGC |
Total endpoints | 5000 per AGC |
Azure Bastion limits
An instance is an optimized Azure VM that is created when you configure Azure Bastion. When you configure Azure Bastion using the Basic SKU, 2 instances are created. If you use the Standard SKU, you can specify the number of instances between 2-50.
Workload Type* | Session Limit per Instance** |
---|---|
Light | 25 |
Medium | 20 |
Heavy | 2 |
*These workload types are defined here: Remote Desktop workloads
**These limits are based on RDP performance tests for Azure Bastion. The numbers may vary due to other on-going RDP sessions or other on-going SSH sessions.
Azure DNS limits
Public DNS
Public DNS zones
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Public DNS zones per subscription | 250 1 |
Record sets per public DNS zone | 10,000 1 |
Records per record set in public DNS zone | 20 1 |
Number of Alias records for a single Azure resource | 20 |
1If you need to increase these quota limits, contact Azure Support.
Public DNS zone operations
Operation | Limit (per zone) |
---|---|
Create | 40/min |
Delete | 40/min |
Get | 1000/min |
List | 60/min |
List By Resource Group | 60/min (per resource group) |
Update | 40/min |
Public DNS resource record operations
Operation | Limit (per zone) |
---|---|
Create | 200/min |
Delete | 200/min |
Get | 2000/min |
List By DNS Zone | 60/min |
List By Type | 60/min |
Update | 200/min |
Private DNS
Private DNS zones
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Private DNS zones per subscription | 1000 |
Record sets per private DNS zone | 25000 |
Records per record set for private DNS zones | 20 |
Virtual Network Links per private DNS zone | 1000 |
Virtual Networks Links per private DNS zones with autoregistration enabled | 100 |
Number of private DNS zones a virtual network can get linked to with autoregistration enabled | 1 |
Number of private DNS zones a virtual network can get linked | 1000 |
Private DNS zone operations
Operation | Limit (per subscription) |
---|---|
Create | 40/min |
Delete | 40/min |
Get | 200/min (per zone) |
List by subscription | 60/min |
List by resource group | 100/min (per resource group) |
Update | 40/min |
Private DNS resource record operations
Operation | Limit (per zone) |
---|---|
Create | 60/min |
Delete | 60/min |
Get | 200/min |
List | 100/min |
Update | 60/min |
Virtual network links operations
Operation | Limit (per zone) |
---|---|
Create | 60/min |
Delete | 60/min |
Get | 100/min |
List by virtual network | 20/min |
Update | 60/min |
Azure-provided DNS resolver VM limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Number of DNS queries a virtual machine can send to Azure DNS resolver, per second | 1000 1 |
Maximum number of DNS queries queued (pending response) per virtual machine | 200 1 |
1These limits are applied to every individual virtual machine and not at the virtual network level. DNS queries exceeding these limits are dropped. These limits apply to the default Azure resolver, not the DNS private resolver.
DNS Private Resolver1
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
DNS private resolvers per subscription | 15 |
Inbound endpoints per DNS private resolver | 5 |
Outbound endpoints per DNS private resolver | 5 |
Forwarding rules per DNS forwarding ruleset | 1000 |
Virtual network links per DNS forwarding ruleset | 500 |
Outbound endpoints per DNS forwarding ruleset | 2 |
DNS forwarding rulesets per outbound endpoint | 2 |
Target DNS servers per forwarding rule | 6 |
QPS per endpoint | 10,000 |
1Different limits might be enforced by the Azure portal until the portal is updated. Use PowerShell to provision elements up to the most current limits.
Azure Firewall limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Max Data throughput | 100 Gbps for Premium, 30 Gbps for Standard, 250 Mbps for Basic (preview) SKU For more information, see Azure Firewall performance. |
Rule limits | 20,000 unique source/destinations in network rules Unique source/destinations in network = sum of (unique source addresses * unique destination addresses for each rule) An IP group counts as one address, regardless of how many IP addresses it contains. You can track the Firewall Policy network rule count in the policy analytics under the Insights tab. As a proxy, you can also monitor your Firewall Latency Probe metrics to ensure it stays within 20 ms even during peak hours. |
Total size of rules within a single Rule Collection Group | 1 MB for Firewall policies created before July 2022 2 MB for Firewall policies created after July 2022 |
Number of Rule Collection Groups in a firewall policy | 50 for Firewall policies created before July 2022 90 for Firewall policies created after July 2022 |
Maximum DNAT rules (Maximum external destinations) | 250 maximum [number of firewall public IP addresses + unique destinations (destination address, port, and protocol)] The DNAT limitation is due to the underlying platform. For example, you can configure 500 UDP rules to the same destination IP address and port (one unique destination), while 500 rules to the same IP address but to 500 different ports exceeds the limit (500 unique destinations). If you need more than 250, you'll need to add another firewall. |
Minimum AzureFirewallSubnet size | /26 |
Port range in network and application rules | 1 - 65535 |
Public IP addresses | 250 maximum. All public IP addresses can be used in DNAT rules and they all contribute to available SNAT ports. |
IP addresses in IP Groups | Maximum of 200 unique IP Groups per firewall policy. Maximum 5000 individual IP addresses or IP prefixes per each IP Group. |
Route table | By default, AzureFirewallSubnet has a 0.0.0.0/0 route with the NextHopType value set to Internet. Azure Firewall must have direct Internet connectivity. If your AzureFirewallSubnet learns a default route to your on-premises network via BGP, you must override that with a 0.0.0.0/0 UDR with the NextHopType value set as Internet to maintain direct Internet connectivity. By default, Azure Firewall doesn't support forced tunneling to an on-premises network. However, if your configuration requires forced tunneling to an on-premises network, Microsoft will support it on a case by case basis. Contact Support so that we can review your case. If accepted, we'll allow your subscription and ensure the required firewall Internet connectivity is maintained. |
FQDNs in network rules | For good performance, do not exceed more than 1000 FQDNs across all network rules per firewall. |
TLS inspection timeout | 120 seconds |
Azure Front Door (classic) limits
- In addition to the following limits, there are composite limit on the number of routing rules, front-end domains, protocols, and paths.
Resource | Classic tier limit |
---|---|
Azure Front Door resources per subscription | 100 |
Front-end hosts, which include custom domains per resource | 500 |
Routing rules per resource | 500 |
Rules per Rule set | 25 |
Back-end pools per resource2 | 50 |
Back ends per back-end pool | 100 |
Path patterns to match for a routing rule | 25 |
URLs in a single cache purge call | 100 |
Maximum bandwidth1 | 75 Gbps |
Maximum requests per second per profile1 | 100,000 |
HTTP header size limit (per header) | 32 KB |
Custom web application firewall rules per policy | 100 |
Web application firewall policy per subscription | 100 |
Web application firewall match conditions per custom rule | 10 |
Web application firewall IP address ranges per custom rule | 600 |
Web application firewall string match values per match condition | 10 |
Web application firewall string match value length | 256 |
Web application firewall POST body parameter name length | 256 |
Web application firewall HTTP header name length | 256 |
Web application firewall cookie name length | 256 |
Web application firewall exclusion limit | 100 |
Web application firewall HTTP request body inspection limit | 128 KB |
Web application firewall custom response body length | 32 KB |
1If the traffic isn't globally distributed and concentrated in one or more regions, or if a higher quota limited is need, create an Azure support request.
2To request a limit increase, create an Azure Support request. Free subscriptions including Azure Free Account and Azure for Students aren't eligible for limit or quota increases. If you have a free subscription, you can upgrade to a Pay-As-You-Go subscription.
Azure Front Door Standard and Premium service limits
- Maximum of 500 total Standard and Premium profiles per subscription.
- In addition to the following limits, there are composite limit on the number of routes, domains, protocols, and paths.
Resource | Standard tier limit | Premium tier limit |
---|---|---|
Maximum profiles per subscription | 500 | 500 |
Maximum endpoint per profile | 10 | 25 |
Maximum custom domain per profile | 100 | 500 |
Maximum origin groups per profile | 100 | 200 |
Maximum origins per origin group | 50 | 50 |
Maximum origins per profile | 100 | 200 |
Maximum origin timeout | 16 - 240 secs | 16 - 240 secs |
Maximum routes per profile | 100 | 200 |
Maximum rule set per profile | 100 | 200 |
Maximum rules per route | 100 | 100 |
Maximum rules per rule set | 100 | 100 |
Maximum bandwidth1 | 75 Gbps | 75 Gbps |
Maximum requests per second per profile1 | 100,000 | 100,000 |
Path patterns to match for a routing rule | 25 | 50 |
URLs in a single cache purge call | 100 | 100 |
Maximum security policy per profile | 100 | 200 |
Maximum associations per security policy | 110 | 225 |
Maximum secrets per profile | 100 | 500 |
HTTP header size limit (per header) | 32 KB | 32 KB |
Web Application Firewall (WAF) policy per subscription | 100 | 100 |
WAF custom rules per policy | 100 | 100 |
WAF match conditions per custom rule | 10 | 10 |
WAF custom regex rules per policy | 5 | 5 |
WAF IP address ranges per match conditions | 600 | 600 |
WAF string match values per match condition | 10 | 10 |
WAF string match value length | 256 | 256 |
WAF POST body parameter name length | 256 | 256 |
WAF HTTP header name length | 256 | 256 |
WAF cookie name length | 256 | 256 |
WAF exclusion per policy | 100 | 100 |
WAF HTTP request body and file upload inspection limit | 128 KB | 128 KB |
WAF custom response body length | 32 KB | 32 KB |
1If the traffic isn't globally distributed and concentrated in one or more regions, or if a higher quota limited is need, create an Azure support request.
Timeout values
From Client to Front Door
- Front Door has an idle TCP connection timeout of 61 seconds.
Front Door to application back-end
After the HTTP request gets forwarded to the back end, Azure Front Door waits for 60 seconds (Standard and Premium) or 30 seconds (classic) for the first packet from the back end. Then it returns a 503 error to the client, or 504 for a cached request. You can configure this value using the originResponseTimeoutSeconds field in Azure Front Door Standard and Premium API, or the sendRecvTimeoutSeconds field in the Azure Front Door (classic) API.
After the back end receives the first packet, if the origin pauses for any reason in the middle of the response body beyond the originResponseTimeoutSeconds or sendRecvTimeoutSeconds, the response will be canceled.
Front Door takes advantage of HTTP keep-alive to keep connections open for reuse from previous requests. These connections have an idle timeout of 90 seconds. Azure Front Door would disconnect idle connections after reaching the 90-second idle timeout. This timeout value can't be configured.
Upload and download data limit
With chunked transfer encoding (CTE) | Without HTTP chunking | |
---|---|---|
Download | There's no limit on the download size. | There's no limit on the download size. |
Upload | There's no limit as long as each CTE upload is less than 2 GB. | The size can't be larger than 2 GB. |
Other limits
- Maximum URL size - 8,192 bytes - Specifies maximum length of the raw URL (scheme + hostname + port + path + query string of the URL)
- Maximum Query String size - 4,096 bytes - Specifies the maximum length of the query string, in bytes.
- Maximum HTTP response header size from health probe URL - 4,096 bytes - Specified the maximum length of all the response headers of health probes.
- Maximum rules engine action header value character: 640 characters.
- Maximum rules engine condition header value character: 256 characters.
- Maximum ETag header size: 128 bytes
- Maximum endpoint name for Standard and Premium: 46 characters.
For more information about limits that apply to Rules Engine configurations, see rules engine terminology
Azure Network Watcher limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Network Watcher instances per region per subscription | 1 (One instance in a region to enable access to the service in the region) |
Connection monitors per region per subscription | 100 |
Maximum test groups per a connection monitor | 20 |
Maximum sources and destinations per a connection monitor | 100 |
Maximum test configurations per a connection monitor | 20 |
Packet capture sessions per region per subscription | 10,000 (Number of sessions only, not saved captures) |
VPN troubleshoot operations per subscription | 1 (Number of operations at one time) |
Azure Route Server limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Number of BGP peers | 8 |
Number of routes each BGP peer can advertise to Azure Route Server 1 | 1,000 |
Number of VMs in the virtual network (including peered virtual networks) that Azure Route Server can support | 4,000 |
Number of virtual networks that Azure Route Server can support | 500 |
Number of total on-premises and Azure Virtual Network prefixes that Azure Route Server can support | 10,000 |
1 If your NVA advertises more routes than the limit, the BGP session gets dropped.
Note
The total number of routes advertised from VNet address space and Route Server towards ExpressRoute circuit, when Branch-to-branch enabled, must not exceed 1,000. For more information, see Route advertisement limits of ExpressRoute.
ExpressRoute limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
ExpressRoute circuits per subscription | 50 (Submit a support request to increase limit) |
ExpressRoute circuits per region per subscription, with Azure Resource Manager | 10 |
Maximum number of circuits in the same peering location linked to the same virtual network | 4 |
Maximum number of circuits in different peering locations linked to the same virtual network | Standard / ERGw1Az - 4 High Perf / ERGw2Az - 8 Ultra Performance / ErGw3Az - 16 |
Maximum number of IPs for ExpressRoute provider circuit with Fastpath | 25,000 |
Maximum number of IPs for ExpressRoute Direct 10 Gbps with Fastpath | 100,000 |
Maximum number of IPs for ExpressRoute Direct 100 Gbps with Fastpath | 200,000 |
Maximum number of flows for ExpressRoute Traffic Collector | 300,000 |
Route advertisement limits
Resource | Local / Standard SKU | Premium SKU |
---|---|---|
Maximum number of IPv4 routes advertised to Azure private peering from on-premises | 4,000 | 10,000 |
Maximum number of IPv6 routes advertised to Azure private peering from on-premises | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of IPv4 routes advertised from Azure private peering from the VNet address space to ExpressRoute virtual network gateway | 1,000 | 1,000 |
Maximum number of IPv6 routes advertised from Azure private peering from the VNet address space to ExpressRoute virtual network gateway | 100 | 100 |
Maximum number of IPv4 routes advertised to Microsoft peering from on-premises | 200 | 200 |
Maximum number of IPv6 routes advertised to Microsoft peering from on-premises | 200 | 200 |
Virtual networks links allowed for each ExpressRoute circuit limit
Circuit size | Local / Standard SKU | Premium SKU |
---|---|---|
50 Mbps | 10 | 20 |
100 Mbps | 10 | 25 |
200 Mbps | 10 | 25 |
500 Mbps | 10 | 40 |
1 Gbps | 10 | 50 |
2 Gbps | 10 | 60 |
5 Gbps | 10 | 75 |
10 Gbps | 10 | 100 |
40 Gbps* | 10 | 100 |
100 Gbps* | 10 | 100 |
*100-Gbps ExpressRoute Direct Only
Note
Global Reach connections count against the limit of virtual network connections per ExpressRoute Circuit. For example, a 10 Gbps Premium Circuit would allow for 5 Global Reach connections and 95 connections to the ExpressRoute Gateways or 95 Global Reach connections and 5 connections to the ExpressRoute Gateways or any other combination up to the limit of 100 connections for the circuit.
ExpressRoute gateway performance limits
The following tables provide an overview of the different types of gateways, their respective limitations, and their expected performance metrics. These numbers are derived from the following testing conditions and represent the max support limits. Actual performance may vary, depending on how closely traffic replicates these testing conditions.
Testing conditions
Gateway SKU | Traffic sent from on-premises | Number of routes advertised by gateway | Number of routes learned by gateway |
---|---|---|---|
Standard/ERGw1Az | 1 Gbps | 500 | 4000 |
High Performance/ERGw2Az | 2 Gbps | 500 | 9,500 |
Ultra Performance/ErGw3Az | 10 Gbps | 500 | 9,500 |
ErGwScale (per scale unit) | 1 Gbps | 500 | 4,000 |
Note
ExpressRoute can facilitate up to 11,000 routes that spans virtual network address spaces, on-premises network, and any relevant virtual network peering connections. To ensure stability of your ExpressRoute connection, refrain from advertising more than 11,000 routes to ExpressRoute.
Performance results
This table applies to both the Azure Resource Manager and classic deployment models.
Gateway SKU | Mega-Bits per second | Packets per second | Supported number of VMs in the virtual network 1 | Flow count limit |
---|---|---|---|---|
Standard/ERGw1Az | 1,000 | 100,000 | 2,000 | 200,000 |
High Performance/ERGw2Az | 2,000 | 200,000 | 4,500 | 400,000 |
Ultra Performance/ErGw3Az | 10,000 | 1,000,000 | 11,000 | 1,000,000 |
ErGwScale (per scale unit) | 1,000 | 100,000 | 2,000 | 100,000 per scale unit |
1 The values in the table are estimates and vary depending on the CPU utilization of the gateway. If the CPU utilization is high and the number of supported VMs gets exceeded, the gateway will start to drop packets.
Important
- Application performance depends on multiple factors, such as end-to-end latency, and the number of traffic flows the application opens. The numbers in the table represent the upper limit that the application can theoretically achieve in an ideal environment. Additionally, Microsoft performs routine host and OS maintenance on the ExpressRoute Virtual Network Gateway, to maintain reliability of the service. During a maintenance period, the control plane and data path capacity of the gateway is reduced.
- During a maintenance period, you may experience intermittent connectivity issues to private endpoint resources.
- ExpressRoute supports a maximum TCP and UDP packet size of 1400 bytes. Packet size larger than 1400 bytes will get fragmented.
- Azure Route Server can support up to 4000 VMs. This limit includes VMs in virtual networks that are peered. For more information, see Azure Route Server limitations.
NAT Gateway limits
The following limits apply to NAT gateway resources managed through Azure Resource Manager per region per subscription. Learn how to view your current resource usage against your subscription limits.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Public IP addresses | 16 per NAT gateway |
Subnets | 800 per NAT gateway |
Data throughput1 | 50 Gbps |
NAT gateways for Enterprise and CSP agreements2 | 1,000 per subscription per region |
NAT gateways for Sponsored and pay-as-you-go2 | 100 per subscription per region |
NAT gateways for Free Trial and all other offer types2 | 15 per subscription per region |
Packets processed | 1M - 5M packets per second |
Connections to same destination endpoint | 50,000 connections to the same destination per public IP |
Connections total | 2M connections per NAT gateway |
1 The total data throughput of 50 Gbps is split between outbound and inbound (return) data through a NAT gateway resource. Data throughput is rate limited at 25 Gbps for outbound data and 25 Gbps for inbound (response) data through NAT gateway.
2 Default limits for NAT gateways vary by offer category type, such as Free Trial, pay-as-you-go, and CSP. For example, the default for Enterprise Agreement subscriptions is 1000.
Private Link limits
The following limits apply to Azure private link:
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Number of private endpoints per virtual network | 1000 |
Number of private endpoints per subscription | 64000 |
Number of private link services per subscription | 800 |
Number of private link services per Standard Load Balancer | 8 |
Number of IP Configurations on a private link service | 8 (This number is for the NAT IP addresses used per PLS) |
Number of private endpoints on the same private link service | 1000 |
Number of subscriptions allowed in visibility setting on private link service | 100 |
Number of subscriptions allowed in auto-approval setting on private link service | 100 |
Number of private endpoints per key vault | 64 |
Number of key vaults with private endpoints per subscription | 400 |
Number of private DNS zone groups that can be linked to a private endpoint | 1 |
Number of DNS zones in each group | 5 |
Number of private IP addresses on private endpoint network interface | 500 |
Traffic Manager limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Profiles per subscription | 200 1 |
Endpoints per profile | 200 |
1If you need to increase these limits, contact Azure Support.
VPN Gateway limits
The following limits apply to VPN Gateway resources and VPN Gateway virtual network gateways, unless otherwise stated.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
VNet Address Prefixes | 600 per VPN gateway |
Aggregate BGP routes | 4,000 per VPN gateway |
Local Network Gateway address prefixes | 1000 per local network gateway |
S2S connections | Limit depends on the gateway SKU. See the Limits by gateway SKU table. |
P2S connections | Limit depends on the gateway SKU. See the Limits by gateway SKU table. |
P2S route limit - IKEv2 | 256 for non-Windows / 25 for Windows |
P2S route limit - OpenVPN | 1000 |
Max. flows | 500K inbound and 500K outbound for VpnGw1-5/AZ |
Traffic Selector Policies | 100 |
Custom APIPA BGP addresses | 32 |
Supported number of VMs in the virtual network | Limit depends on the gateway SKU. See the Limits by gateway SKU table. |
Limits by gateway SKU
VPN Gateway Generation |
SKU | S2S/VNet-to-VNet Tunnels |
P2S SSTP Connections |
P2S IKEv2/OpenVPN Connections |
Aggregate Throughput Benchmark |
BGP | Zone-redundant | Supported Number of VMs in the Virtual Network |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Generation1 | Basic | Max. 10 | Max. 128 | Not Supported | 100 Mbps | Not Supported | No | 200 |
Generation1 | VpnGw1 | Max. 30 | Max. 128 | Max. 250 | 650 Mbps | Supported | No | 450 |
Generation1 | VpnGw2 | Max. 30 | Max. 128 | Max. 500 | 1 Gbps | Supported | No | 1300 |
Generation1 | VpnGw3 | Max. 30 | Max. 128 | Max. 1000 | 1.25 Gbps | Supported | No | 4000 |
Generation1 | VpnGw1AZ | Max. 30 | Max. 128 | Max. 250 | 650 Mbps | Supported | Yes | 1000 |
Generation1 | VpnGw2AZ | Max. 30 | Max. 128 | Max. 500 | 1 Gbps | Supported | Yes | 2000 |
Generation1 | VpnGw3AZ | Max. 30 | Max. 128 | Max. 1000 | 1.25 Gbps | Supported | Yes | 5000 |
Generation2 | VpnGw2 | Max. 30 | Max. 128 | Max. 500 | 1.25 Gbps | Supported | No | 685 |
Generation2 | VpnGw3 | Max. 30 | Max. 128 | Max. 1000 | 2.5 Gbps | Supported | No | 2240 |
Generation2 | VpnGw4 | Max. 100* | Max. 128 | Max. 5000 | 5 Gbps | Supported | No | 5300 |
Generation2 | VpnGw5 | Max. 100* | Max. 128 | Max. 10000 | 10 Gbps | Supported | No | 6700 |
Generation2 | VpnGw2AZ | Max. 30 | Max. 128 | Max. 500 | 1.25 Gbps | Supported | Yes | 2000 |
Generation2 | VpnGw3AZ | Max. 30 | Max. 128 | Max. 1000 | 2.5 Gbps | Supported | Yes | 3300 |
Generation2 | VpnGw4AZ | Max. 100* | Max. 128 | Max. 5000 | 5 Gbps | Supported | Yes | 4400 |
Generation2 | VpnGw5AZ | Max. 100* | Max. 128 | Max. 10000 | 10 Gbps | Supported | Yes | 9000 |
For more information about gateway SKUs and limits, see About gateway SKUs.
Gateway performance limits
The table in this section lists the results of performance tests for VpnGw SKUs. A VPN tunnel connects to a VPN gateway instance. Each instance throughput is mentioned in the throughput table in the previous section and is available aggregated across all tunnels connecting to that instance. The table shows the observed bandwidth and packets per second throughput per tunnel for the different gateway SKUs. All testing was performed between gateways (endpoints) within Azure across different regions with 100 connections and under standard load conditions. We used publicly available iPerf and CTSTraffic tools to measure performances for site-to-site connections
- The best performance was obtained when we used the GCMAES256 algorithm for both IPsec Encryption and Integrity.
- Average performance was obtained when using AES256 for IPsec Encryption and SHA256 for Integrity.
- The lowest performance was obtained when we used DES3 for IPsec Encryption and SHA256 for Integrity.
Generation | SKU | Algorithms used |
Throughput observed per tunnel |
Packets per second per tunnel observed |
---|---|---|---|---|
Generation1 | VpnGw1 | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
650 Mbps 500 Mbps 130 Mbps |
62,000 47,000 12,000 |
Generation1 | VpnGw2 | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
1.2 Gbps 650 Mbps 140 Mbps |
100,000 61,000 13,000 |
Generation1 | VpnGw3 | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
1.25 Gbps 700 Mbps 140 Mbps |
120,000 66,000 13,000 |
Generation1 | VpnGw1AZ | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
650 Mbps 500 Mbps 130 Mbps |
62,000 47,000 12,000 |
Generation1 | VpnGw2AZ | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
1.2 Gbps 650 Mbps 140 Mbps |
110,000 61,000 13,000 |
Generation1 | VpnGw3AZ | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
1.25 Gbps 700 Mbps 140 Mbps |
120,000 66,000 13,000 |
Generation2 | VpnGw2 | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
1.25 Gbps 550 Mbps 130 Mbps |
120,000 52,000 12,000 |
Generation2 | VpnGw3 | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
1.5 Gbps 700 Mbps 140 Mbps |
140,000 66,000 13,000 |
Generation2 | VpnGw4 | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
2.3 Gbps 700 Mbps 140 Mbps |
220,000 66,000 13,000 |
Generation2 | VpnGw5 | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
2.3 Gbps 700 Mbps 140 Mbps |
220,000 66,000 13,000 |
Generation2 | VpnGw2AZ | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
1.25 Gbps 550 Mbps 130 Mbps |
120,000 52,000 12,000 |
Generation2 | VpnGw3AZ | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
1.5 Gbps 700 Mbps 140 Mbps |
140,000 66,000 13,000 |
Generation2 | VpnGw4AZ | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
2.3 Gbps 700 Mbps 140 Mbps |
220,000 66,000 13,000 |
Generation2 | VpnGw5AZ | GCMAES256 AES256 & SHA256 DES3 & SHA256 |
2.3 Gbps 700 Mbps 140 Mbps |
220,000 66,000 13,000 |
Virtual WAN limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
VPN (branch) connections per hub | 1,000 |
Aggregate throughput per Virtual WAN Site-to-site VPN gateway | 20 Gbps |
Throughput per Virtual WAN VPN connection (2 tunnels) | 2 Gbps with 1 Gbps/IPsec tunnel |
Point-to-site users per hub | 100,000 |
Aggregate throughput per Virtual WAN User VPN (Point-to-site) gateway | 200 Gbps |
Aggregate throughput per Virtual WAN ExpressRoute gateway | 20 Gbps |
ExpressRoute circuit connections per hub | 8 |
VNet connections per hub | 500 minus total number of hubs in Virtual WAN |
Aggregate throughput per Virtual WAN hub router | 50 Gbps for VNet to VNet transit |
VM workload across all VNets connected to a single Virtual WAN hub | 2000 (If you want to raise the limit or quota above the default limit, see hub settings). |
Total number of routes the hub can accept from its connected resources (virtual networks, branches, other virtual hubs, etc.) | 10,000 |
Notification Hubs limits
Tier | Free | Basic | Standard |
---|---|---|---|
Included pushes | 1 million | 10 million | 10 million |
Active devices | 500 | 200,000 | 10 million |
Tag quota per installation or registration | 60 | 60 | 60 |
For more information on limits and pricing, see Notification Hubs pricing.
Microsoft Dev Box limits
Subscription type | VM Cores | Network Connections | Dev centers | Dev box definitions | Dev box projects |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pay as you go | 20 | 5 | 2 | 200 | 500 |
Azure Pass | 20 | 5 | 2 | 200 | 500 |
CSP | 20 | 5 | 2 | 200 | 500 |
Free trial | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Azure for Students | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Enterprise | 80 | 10 | 5 | 200 | 500 |
MSDN | n/a | 5 | 2 | 200 | 500 |
Microsoft Purview limits
The latest values for Microsoft Purview quotas can be found in the Microsoft Purview quota page.
Microsoft Sentinel limits
For Microsoft Sentinel limits, see Service limits for Microsoft Sentinel
Service Bus limits
The following table lists quota information specific to Azure Service Bus messaging. For information about pricing and other quotas for Service Bus, see Service Bus pricing.
Quota name | Scope | Value | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Maximum number of namespaces per Azure subscription | Namespace | 1000 (default and maximum) | This limit is based on the Microsoft.ServiceBus provider, not based on the tier. Therefore, it's the total number of namespaces across all tiers. Subsequent requests for additional namespaces are rejected. |
Queue or topic size | Entity | 1, 2, 3, 4 GB or 5 GB In the Premium SKU, and the Standard SKU with partitioning enabled, the maximum queue or topic size is 80 GB. Total size limit for a premium namespace per messaging unit is 1 TB. Total size of all entities in a namespace can't exceed this limit. |
Defined upon creation/updation of the queue or topic. Subsequent incoming messages are rejected, and an exception is received by the calling code. Currently, a large message (size > 1 MB) sent to a queue is counted twice. And, a large message (size > 1 MB) sent to a topic is counted X + 1 times, where X is the number of subscriptions to the topic. |
Number of concurrent connections on a namespace | Namespace | Net Messaging: 1,000. AMQP: 5,000. |
Subsequent requests for additional connections are rejected, and an exception is received by the calling code. REST operations don't count toward concurrent TCP connections. |
Number of concurrent receive requests on a queue, topic, or subscription entity | Entity | 5,000 | Subsequent receive requests are rejected, and an exception is received by the calling code. This quota applies to the combined number of concurrent receive operations across all subscriptions on a topic. |
Number of topics or queues per namespace | Namespace | 10,000 for the Basic or Standard tier. The total number of topics and queues in a namespace must be less than or equal to 10,000. For the Premium tier, 1,000 per messaging unit (MU). |
Subsequent requests for creation of a new topic or queue on the namespace are rejected. As a result, if configured through the Azure portal, an error message is generated. If called from the management API, an exception is received by the calling code. |
Number of partitioned topics or queues per namespace | Namespace | Basic and Standard tiers: 100. Each partitioned queue or topic counts toward the quota of 1,000 entities per namespace. | Subsequent requests for creation of a new partitioned topic or queue in the namespace are rejected. As a result, if configured through the Azure portal, an error message is generated. If called from the management API, the exception QuotaExceededException is received by the calling code. If you want to have more partitioned entities in a basic or a standard tier namespace, create additional namespaces. |
Maximum size of any messaging entity path: queue or topic | Entity | 260 characters. | |
Maximum size of any messaging entity name: namespace, subscription, or subscription rule | Entity | 50 characters. | |
Maximum size of a message ID | Entity | 128 | |
Maximum size of a message session ID | Entity | 128 | |
Message size for a queue, topic, or subscription entity | Entity | 256 KB for Standard tier 100 MB for Premium tier on AMQP, and 1 MB for Premium on HTTP and SBMP. The maximum size for batches is 256 KB for the Standard tier, and 1 MB for the Premium tier. The message size includes the size of properties (system and user) and the size of payload. The size of system properties varies depending on your scenario. |
Incoming messages that exceed these quotas are rejected, and an exception is received by the calling code. |
Message property size for a queue, topic, or subscription entity | Entity | Maximum message property size for each property is 32 KB. Cumulative size of all properties can't exceed 64 KB. This limit applies to the entire header of the brokered message, which has both user properties and system properties, such as sequence number, label, and message ID. Maximum number of header properties in property bag: byte/int.MaxValue. |
The exception SerializationException is generated. |
Number of subscriptions per topic | Entity | 2,000 per-topic for the Standard tier and Premium tier. | Subsequent requests for creating additional subscriptions for the topic are rejected. As a result, if configured through the portal, an error message is shown. If called from the management API, an exception is received by the calling code. |
Number of SQL filters per topic | Entity | 2,000 | Subsequent requests for creation of additional filters on the topic are rejected, and an exception is received by the calling code. |
Number of correlation filters per topic | Entity | 100,000 | Subsequent requests for creation of additional filters on the topic are rejected, and an exception is received by the calling code. |
Size of SQL filters or actions | Namespace | Maximum length of filter condition string: 1,024 (1 K). Maximum length of rule action string: 1,024 (1 K). Maximum number of expressions per rule action: 32. |
Subsequent requests for creation of additional filters are rejected, and an exception is received by the calling code. |
Number of shared access authorization rules per namespace, queue, or topic | Entity, namespace | Maximum number of rules per entity type: 12. Rules that are configured on a Service Bus namespace apply to all types: queues, topics. |
Subsequent requests for creation of additional rules are rejected, and an exception is received by the calling code. |
Number of messages per transaction | Transaction | 100 For both Send() and SendAsync() operations. |
Additional incoming messages are rejected, and an exception stating "Can't send more than 100 messages in a single transaction" is received by the calling code. |
Maximum number of messages deleted in DeleteMessagesAsync call | Entity | 4000 | |
Maximum number of messages returned in PeekMessagesAsync call | Entity | 250 | |
Number of virtual network and IP filter rules | Namespace | 128 |
Site Recovery limits
The following limits apply to Azure Site Recovery.
Limit identifier | Limit |
---|---|
Number of vaults per subscription | 500 |
Number of protected disks per subscription (Both Data and OS) | 3000 |
Number of appliances per Recovery Services vault | 250 |
Number of protection groups per Recovery Services vault | No limit |
Number of recovery plans per Recovery Services vault | No limit |
Number of servers per protection group | No limit |
Number of servers per recovery plan | 100 |
SQL Database limits
For SQL Database limits, see SQL Database resource limits for single databases, SQL Database resource limits for elastic pools and pooled databases, and SQL Database resource limits for SQL Managed Instance.
The maximum number of private endpoints per Azure SQL Database logical server is 250.
Azure Synapse Analytics limits
Azure Synapse Analytics has the following default limits to ensure customer's subscriptions are protected from each other's workloads. To raise the limits to the maximum for your subscription, contact support.
Azure Synapse limits for workspaces
For Pay-As-You-Go, Free Trial, Azure Pass, and Azure for Students subscription offer types:
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
Synapse workspaces in an Azure subscription | 2 | 2 |
For other subscription offer types:
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
Synapse workspaces in an Azure subscription per region | 20 | 100 |
Azure Synapse limits for Apache Spark
For Pay-As-You-Go, Free Trial, Azure Pass, and Azure for Students subscription offer types:
Resource | Memory Optimized cores | GPU cores |
---|---|---|
Spark cores in a Synapse workspace | 12 | 48 |
For other subscription offer types:
Resource | Memory Optimized cores | GPU cores |
---|---|---|
Spark cores in a Synapse workspace | 50 | 50 |
For additional limits for Spark pools, see Concurrency and API rate limits for Apache Spark pools in Azure Synapse Analytics.
Azure Synapse limits for pipelines
Resource | Default limit | Maximum limit |
---|---|---|
Synapse pipelines in a Synapse workspace | 800 | 800 |
Total number of entities, such as pipelines, data sets, triggers, linked services, Private Endpoints, and integration runtimes, within a workspace | 5,000 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Total CPU cores for Azure-SSIS Integration Runtimes under one workspace | 256 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Concurrent pipeline runs per workspace that's shared among all pipelines in the workspace | 10,000 | 10,000 |
Concurrent External activity runs per workspace per Azure Integration Runtime region External activities are managed on integration runtime but execute on linked services, including Databricks, stored procedure, HDInsight, Web, and others. This limit does not apply to Self-hosted IR. |
3,000 | 3,000 |
Concurrent Pipeline activity runs per workspace per Azure Integration Runtime region Pipeline activities execute on integration runtime, including Lookup, GetMetadata, and Delete. This limit does not apply to Self-hosted IR. |
1,000 | 1,000 |
Concurrent authoring operations per workspace per Azure Integration Runtime region Including test connection, browse folder list and table list, preview data. This limit does not apply to Self-hosted IR. |
200 | 200 |
Concurrent Data Integration Units1 consumption per workspace per Azure Integration Runtime region | Region group 12: 6,000 Region group 22: 3,000 Region group 32: 1,500 Managed virtual network2: 2,400 |
Region group 12: 6,000 Region group 22: 3,000 Region group 32: 1,500 Managed virtual network: Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Maximum activities per pipeline, which includes inner activities for containers | 40 | 40 |
Maximum number of linked integration runtimes that can be created against a single self-hosted integration runtime | 100 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Maximum parameters per pipeline | 50 | 50 |
ForEach items | 100,000 | 100,000 |
ForEach parallelism | 20 | 50 |
Maximum queued runs per pipeline | 100 | 100 |
Characters per expression | 8,192 | 8,192 |
Minimum tumbling window trigger interval | 5 min | 15 min |
Maximum timeout for pipeline activity runs | 7 days | 7 days |
Bytes per object for pipeline objects3 | 200 KB | 200 KB |
Bytes per object for dataset and linked service objects3 | 100 KB | 2,000 KB |
Bytes per payload for each activity run4 | 896 KB | 896 KB |
Data Integration Units1 per copy activity run | 256 | 256 |
Write API calls | 1,200/h | 1,200/h This limit is imposed by Azure Resource Manager, not Azure Synapse Analytics. |
Read API calls | 12,500/h | 12,500/h This limit is imposed by Azure Resource Manager, not Azure Synapse Analytics. |
Monitoring queries per minute | 1,000 | 1,000 |
Maximum time of data flow debug session | 8 hrs | 8 hrs |
Concurrent number of data flows per integration runtime | 50 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Concurrent number of data flows per integration runtime in managed vNet | 20 | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
Concurrent number of data flow debug sessions per user per workspace | 3 | 3 |
Data Flow Azure IR TTL limit | 4 hrs | 4 hrs |
Meta Data Entity Size limit in a workspace | 2 GB | Find out how to request a quota increase from support. |
1 The data integration unit (DIU) is used in a cloud-to-cloud copy operation, learn more from Data integration units (version 2). For information on billing, see Azure Synapse Analytics Pricing.
2 Azure Integration Runtime is globally available to ensure data compliance, efficiency, and reduced network egress costs.
Region group | Regions |
---|---|
Region group 1 | Central US, East US, East US 2, North Europe, West Europe, West US, West US 2 |
Region group 2 | Australia East, Australia Southeast, Brazil South, Central India, Japan East, North Central US, South Central US, Southeast Asia, West Central US |
Region group 3 | Other regions |
If managed virtual network is enabled, the data integration unit (DIU) in all region groups are 2,400.
3 Pipeline, data set, and linked service objects represent a logical grouping of your workload. Limits for these objects don't relate to the amount of data you can move and process with Azure Synapse Analytics. Synapse Analytics is designed to scale to handle petabytes of data.
4 The payload for each activity run includes the activity configuration, the associated dataset(s) and linked service(s) configurations if any, and a small portion of system properties generated per activity type. Limit for this payload size doesn't relate to the amount of data you can move and process with Azure Synapse Analytics. Learn about the symptoms and recommendation if you hit this limit.
Azure Synapse limits for dedicated SQL pools
For details of capacity limits for dedicated SQL pools in Azure Synapse Analytics, see dedicated SQL pool resource limits.
Azure Resource Manager limits for web service calls
Azure Resource Manager has limits for API calls. You can make API calls at a rate within the Azure Resource Manager API limits.
Virtual machine disk limits
You can attach a number of data disks to an Azure virtual machine (VM). Based on the scalability and performance targets for a VM's data disks, you can determine the number and type of disk that you need to meet your performance and capacity requirements.
Important
For optimal performance, limit the number of highly utilized disks attached to the virtual machine to avoid possible throttling. If all attached disks aren't highly utilized at the same time, the virtual machine can support a larger number of disks. Additionally, when creating a managed disk from an existing managed disk, only 49 disks can be created concurrently. More disks can be created after some of the initial 49 have been created.
For Azure managed disks:
The following table illustrates the default and maximum limits of the number of resources per region per subscription. The limits remain the same irrespective of disks encrypted with either platform-managed keys or customer-managed keys. There is no limit for the number of Managed Disks, snapshots and images per resource group.
Resource Limit Standard managed disks 50,000 Standard SSD managed disks 50,000 Premium SSD managed disks 50,000 Premium SSD v2 managed disks 1,000 Premium SSD v2 managed disks capacity2 32,768 Ultra disks 1,000 Ultra disk capacity2 32,768 Standard_LRS snapshots1 75,000 Standard_ZRS snapshots1 75,000 Managed image 50,000
1An individual disk can have 500 incremental snapshots.
2This is the default max but higher capacities are supported by request. To request an increase in capacity, request a quota increase or contact Azure Support.
For standard storage accounts:
A Standard storage account has a maximum total request rate of 20,000 IOPS. The total IOPS across all of your virtual machine disks in a Standard storage account should not exceed this limit.
For unmanaged disks, you can roughly calculate the number of highly utilized disks supported by a single standard storage account based on the request rate limit. For example, for a Basic tier VM, the maximum number of highly utilized disks is about 66, which is 20,000/300 IOPS per disk. The maximum number of highly utilized disks for a Standard tier VM is about 40, which is 20,000/500 IOPS per disk.
For premium storage accounts:
A premium storage account has a maximum total throughput rate of 50 Gbps. The total throughput across all of your VM disks should not exceed this limit.
For more information, see Virtual machine sizes.
For VM Applications
When working with VM applications in Azure, you may encounter an error message that says "Operation could not be completed as it results in exceeding approved UnmanagedStorageAccountCount quota." This error occurs when you have reached the limit for the number of unmanaged storage accounts that you can use.
When you publish a VM application, Azure needs to replicate it across multiple regions. To do this, Azure creates an unmanaged storage account for each region. The number of unmanaged storage accounts that an application uses is determined by the number of replicas across all applications.
As a general rule, each storage account can accommodate up to 200 simultaneous connections. Below are options for resolving the "UnmanagedStorageAccountCount" error:
- Use page blobs for your source application blobs. Unmanaged accounts are only used for block blob replication. Page blobs have no such limits.
- Reduce the number of replicas for your VM Application versions or delete applications you no longer need.
- File a support request to obtain a quota increase.
For more information, see VM Applications.
Disk encryption sets
There's a limitation of 5000 disk encryption sets per region, per subscription. For more information, see the encryption documentation for Linux or Windows virtual machines. If you need to increase the quota, contact Azure support.
Managed virtual machine disks
Standard HDD managed disks
Standard Disk Type | S4 | S6 | S10 | S15 | S20 | S30 | S40 | S50 | S60 | S70 | S80 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Disk size in GiB | 32 | 64 | 128 | 256 | 512 | 1,024 | 2,048 | 4,096 | 8,192 | 16,384 | 32,767 |
Base IOPS per disk | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 1,300 | Up to 2,000 | Up to 2,000 |
*Expanded IOPS per disk | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Up to 1,500 | Up to 3,000 | Up to 3,000 | Up to 3,000 | Up to 3,000 | Up to 3,000 |
Base throughput per disk | Up to 60 MB/s | Up to 60 MB/s | Up to 60 MB/s | Up to 60 MB/s | Up to 60 MB/s | Up to 60 MB/s | Up to 60 MB/s | Up to 60 MB/s | Up to 300 MB/s | Up to 500 MB/s | Up to 500 MB/s |
*Expanded throughput per disk | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Up to 150 MB/s | Up to 300 MB/s | Up to 500 MB/s | Up to 500 MB/s | Up to 500 MB/s | Up to 500 MB/s |
* Only applies to disks with performance plus (preview) enabled.
Standard SSD managed disks
Standard SSD sizes | E1 | E2 | E3 | E4 | E6 | E10 | E15 | E20 | E30 | E40 | E50 | E60 | E70 | E80 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Disk size in GiB | 4 | 8 | 16 | 32 | 64 | 128 | 256 | 512 | 1,024 | 2,048 | 4,096 | 8,192 | 16,384 | 32,767 |
Base IOPS per disk | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 500 | Up to 2,000 | Up to 4,000 | Up to 6,000 |
*Expanded IOPS per disk | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Up to 1,500 | Up to 3,000 | Up to 6,000 | Up to 6,000 | Up to 6,000 | Up to 6,000 |
Base throughput per disk | Up to 100 MB/s | Up to 100 MB/s | Up to 100 MB/s | Up to 100 MB/s | Up to 100 MB/s | Up to 100 MB/s | Up to 100 MB/s | Up to 100 MB/s | Up to 100 MB/s | Up to 100 MB/s | Up to 100 MB/s | Up to 400 MB/s | Up to 600 MB/s | Up to 750 MB/s |
*Expanded throughput per disk | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Up to 150 MB/s | Up to 300 MB/s | Up to 600 MB/s | Up to 750 MB/s | Up to 750 MB/s | Up to 750 MB/s |
Max burst IOPS per disk | 600 | 600 | 600 | 600 | 600 | 600 | 600 | 600 | 1000 | |||||
Max burst throughput per disk | 150 MB/s | 150 MB/s | 150 MB/s | 150 MB/s | 150 MB/s | 150 MB/s | 150 MB/s | 150 MB/s | 250 MB/s | |||||
Max burst duration | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min |
* Only applies to disks with performance plus (preview) enabled.
Premium SSD managed disks: Per-disk limits
Premium SSD sizes | P1 | P2 | P3 | P4 | P6 | P10 | P15 | P20 | P30 | P40 | P50 | P60 | P70 | P80 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Disk size in GiB | 4 | 8 | 16 | 32 | 64 | 128 | 256 | 512 | 1,024 | 2,048 | 4,096 | 8,192 | 16,384 | 32,767 |
Base provisioned IOPS per disk | 120 | 120 | 120 | 120 | 240 | 500 | 1,100 | 2,300 | 5,000 | 7,500 | 7,500 | 16,000 | 18,000 | 20,000 |
**Expanded provisioned IOPS per disk | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 8,000 | 16,000 | 20,000 | 20,000 | 20,000 | 20,000 |
Base provisioned Throughput per disk | 25 MB/s | 25 MB/s | 25 MB/s | 25 MB/s | 50 MB/s | 100 MB/s | 125 MB/s | 150 MB/s | 200 MB/s | 250 MB/s | 250 MB/s | 500 MB/s | 750 MB/s | 900 MB/s |
**Expanded provisioned throughput per disk | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 300 MB/s | 600 MB/s | 900 MB/s | 900 MB/s | 900 MB/s | 900 MB/s |
Max burst IOPS per disk | 3,500 | 3,500 | 3,500 | 3,500 | 3,500 | 3,500 | 3,500 | 3,500 | 30,000* | 30,000* | 30,000* | 30,000* | 30,000* | 30,000* |
Max burst throughput per disk | 170 MB/s | 170 MB/s | 170 MB/s | 170 MB/s | 170 MB/s | 170 MB/s | 170 MB/s | 170 MB/s | 1,000 MB/s* | 1,000 MB/s* | 1,000 MB/s* | 1,000 MB/s* | 1,000 MB/s* | 1,000 MB/s* |
Max burst duration | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | 30 min | Unlimited* | Unlimited* | Unlimited* | Unlimited* | Unlimited* | Unlimited* |
Eligible for reservation | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | Yes, up to one year | Yes, up to one year | Yes, up to one year | Yes, up to one year | Yes, up to one year | Yes, up to one year |
*Applies only to disks with on-demand bursting enabled.
** Only applies to disks with performance plus (preview) enabled.
Premium SSD managed disks: Per-VM limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Maximum IOPS Per VM | 80,000 IOPS with GS5 VM |
Maximum throughput per VM | 2,000 MB/s with GS5 VM |
Unmanaged virtual machine disks
Standard unmanaged virtual machine disks: Per-disk limits
VM tier | Basic tier VM | Standard tier VM |
---|---|---|
Disk size | 4,095 GB | 4,095 GB |
Maximum 8-KB IOPS per persistent disk | 300 | 500 |
Maximum number of disks that perform the maximum IOPS | 66 | 40 |
Premium unmanaged virtual machine disks: Per-account limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Total disk capacity per account | 35 TB |
Total snapshot capacity per account | 10 TB |
Maximum bandwidth per account (ingress + egress)1 | <=50 Gbps |
1Ingress refers to all data from requests that are sent to a storage account. Egress refers to all data from responses that are received from a storage account.
Premium unmanaged virtual machine disks: Per-disk limits
Premium storage disk type | P10 | P20 | P30 | P40 | P50 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Disk size | 128 GiB | 512 GiB | 1,024 GiB (1 TB) | 2,048 GiB (2 TB) | 4,095 GiB (4 TB) |
Maximum IOPS per disk | 500 | 2,300 | 5,000 | 7,500 | 7,500 |
Maximum throughput per disk | 100 MB/sec | 150 MB/sec | 200 MB/sec | 250 MB/sec | 250 MB/sec |
Maximum number of disks per storage account | 280 | 70 | 35 | 17 | 8 |
Premium unmanaged virtual machine disks: Per-VM limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Maximum IOPS per VM | 80,000 IOPS with GS5 VM |
Maximum throughput per VM | 2,000 MB/sec with GS5 VM |
StorSimple System limits
Limit identifier | Limit | Comments |
---|---|---|
Maximum number of storage account credentials | 64 | |
Maximum number of volume containers | 64 | |
Maximum number of volumes | 255 | |
Maximum number of schedules per bandwidth template | 168 | A schedule for every hour, every day of the week. |
Maximum size of a tiered volume on physical devices | 64 TB for StorSimple 8100 and StorSimple 8600 | StorSimple 8100 and StorSimple 8600 are physical devices. |
Maximum size of a tiered volume on virtual devices in Azure | 30 TB for StorSimple 8010 64 TB for StorSimple 8020 |
StorSimple 8010 and StorSimple 8020 are virtual devices in Azure that use Standard storage and Premium storage, respectively. |
Maximum size of a locally pinned volume on physical devices | 9 TB for StorSimple 8100 24 TB for StorSimple 8600 |
StorSimple 8100 and StorSimple 8600 are physical devices. |
Maximum number of iSCSI connections | 512 | |
Maximum number of iSCSI connections from initiators | 512 | |
Maximum number of access control records per device | 64 | |
Maximum number of volumes per backup policy | 24 | |
Maximum number of backups retained per backup policy | 64 | |
Maximum number of schedules per backup policy | 10 | |
Maximum number of snapshots of any type that can be retained per volume | 256 | This amount includes local snapshots and cloud snapshots. |
Maximum number of snapshots that can be present in any device | 10,000 | |
Maximum number of volumes that can be processed in parallel for backup, restore, or clone | 16 |
|
Restore and clone recover time for tiered volumes | <2 minutes |
|
Restore recover time for locally pinned volumes | <2 minutes |
|
Thin-restore availability | Last failover | |
Maximum client read/write throughput, when served from the SSD tier* | 920/720 MB/sec with a single 10-gigabit Ethernet network interface | Up to two times with MPIO and two network interfaces. |
Maximum client read/write throughput, when served from the HDD tier* | 120/250 MB/sec | |
Maximum client read/write throughput, when served from the cloud tier* | 11/41 MB/sec | Read throughput depends on clients generating and maintaining sufficient I/O queue depth. |
*Maximum throughput per I/O type was measured with 100 percent read and 100 percent write scenarios. Actual throughput might be lower and depends on I/O mix and network conditions.
Stream Analytics limits
Limit identifier | Limit | Comments |
---|---|---|
Maximum number of streaming units per subscription per region | 83 | To request an increase in streaming units for your subscription beyond 83, contact Microsoft Support. |
Maximum number of inputs per job | 60 | There's a hard limit of 60 inputs per Azure Stream Analytics job. |
Maximum number of outputs per job | 60 | There's a hard limit of 60 outputs per Stream Analytics job. |
Maximum number of functions per job | 60 | There's a hard limit of 60 functions per Stream Analytics job. |
Maximum number of streaming units per job | 66 | There's a hard limit of 66 streaming units per Stream Analytics job. |
Maximum number of jobs per region | 1,500 | Each subscription can have up to 1,500 jobs per geographical region. |
Reference data blob MB | 5 GB | Up to 5 GB when using 1 or more SUs. |
Maximum number of characters in a query | 512000 | There's a hard limit of 512k characters in an Azure Stream Analytics job query. |
Virtual Machines limits
Virtual Machines limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Virtual machines per cloud service 1 | 50 |
Input endpoints per cloud service 2 | 150 |
1 Virtual machines created by using the classic deployment model instead of Azure Resource Manager are automatically stored in a cloud service. You can add more virtual machines to that cloud service for load balancing and availability.
2 Input endpoints allow communications to a virtual machine from outside the virtual machine's cloud service. Virtual machines in the same cloud service or virtual network can automatically communicate with each other.
Virtual Machines limits - Azure Resource Manager
The following limits apply when you use Azure Resource Manager and Azure resource groups.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
VMs per subscription | 25,0001 per region. |
VM total cores per subscription | 201 per region. Contact support to increase limit. |
Azure Spot VM total cores per subscription | 201 per region. Contact support to increase limit. |
VM per series, such as Dv2 and F, cores per subscription | 201 per region. Contact support to increase limit. |
Availability sets per subscription | 2,500 per region. |
Virtual machines per availability set | 200 |
Proximity placement groups per resource group | 800 |
Certificates per availability set | 1992 |
Certificates per subscription | Unlimited3 |
1 Default limits vary by offer category type, such as Free Trial and Pay-As-You-Go, and by series, such as Dv2, F, and G. For example, the default for Enterprise Agreement subscriptions is 350. For security, subscriptions default to 20 cores to prevent large core deployments. If you need more cores, submit a support ticket.
2 Properties such as SSH public keys are also pushed as certificates and count towards this limit. To bypass this limit, use the Azure Key Vault extension for Windows or the Azure Key Vault extension for Linux to install certificates.
3 With Azure Resource Manager, certificates are stored in the Azure Key Vault. The number of certificates is unlimited for a subscription. There's a 1-MB limit of certificates per deployment, which consists of either a single VM or an availability set.
Note
Virtual machine cores have a regional total limit. They also have a limit for regional per-size series, such as Dv2 and F. These limits are separately enforced. For example, consider a subscription with a US East total VM core limit of 30, an A series core limit of 30, and a D series core limit of 30. This subscription can deploy 30 A1 VMs, or 30 D1 VMs, or a combination of the two not to exceed a total of 30 cores. An example of a combination is 10 A1 VMs and 20 D1 VMs.
Compute Gallery limits
There are limits, per subscription, for deploying resources using Compute Galleries:
- 100 compute galleries, per subscription, per region
- 1,000 image definitions, per subscription, per region
- 10,000 image versions, per subscription, per region
Managed Run Command limit
The maximum number of allowed Managed Run Commands is currently limited to 25.
Virtual Machine Scale Sets limits
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Maximum number of VMs in a scale set | 1,000 |
Maximum number of VMs based on a custom VM image in a scale set | 600 |
Maximum number of scale sets per subscription per region | 2,500 |
Maximum number of nodes supported in VMSS for IB cluster | 100 |
Virtual Network Manager limits
Category | Limitation |
---|---|
General Limitations | |
Cross-tenant Support | Only with static membership network groups |
Azure Subscriptions | Policy application limited to < 15,000 subscriptions |
Policy Enforcement Mode | No addition to network group if set to Disabled |
Policy Evaluation Cycle | Standard evaluation cycle not supported |
Subscription Movement | Moving subscription to another tenant not supported |
Limitations for Connected Groups | |
Virtual Networks in a Group | Max 250 virtual networks |
Communication with Private Endpoints | Not supported in current preview |
Hub-and-Spoke Configuration | Max 500 virtual networks peered to the hub |
Direct Connectivity | Max 250 virtual networks if enabled |
Network Group Membership | A virtual network can be part of up to two connected groups |
Overlapping IP Spaces | Communication to overlapped IP address is dropped |
Limitations for Security Admin Rules | |
IP Prefixes | Max 1,000 IP prefixes combined |
Admin Rules | Max 100 admin rules at one level |
Dev tunnels limits
The following limits apply to dev tunnels. The limits reset monthly.
Resource | Limit |
---|---|
Bandwidth | 5 GB per user |
Tunnels | 10 per user |
Active connections | 20 per port |
Ports | 10 per tunnel |
HTTP request rate | 1500/min per port |
Data transfer rate | Up to 20 MB/s per tunnel |
Max web-forwarding HTTP request body size | 16 MB |
To request higher usage limits for dev tunnels, open an issue in our GitHub repo. In the issue, include which limit you'd like increased and why.