AI apps and agentic workloads expose inefficiencies in your data layer faster than any previous generation of apps. You’re storing embeddings, serving low-latency retrieval, handling bursty traffic from chat and orchestration, and often operating across regions. Done right, Azure Cosmos DB can support these patterns with high performance and cost controls built in. Done wrong, it is easy to over-provision or pay for inefficient queries.
Insights from a recently published Azure Cosmos DB cost savings white paper, combined with guidance from Microsoft leader John Savill and real-world feedback from Azure Cosmos DB customers, reveal a clear pattern. The teams that succeed financially do so by aligning Azure Cosmos DB design decisions to workload behavior early, then refining those decisions as applications scale.
Below are seven practical, field-tested tips to help you scale AI applications on Azure Cosmos DB while keeping costs under control.
Tip 1: Start free for dev/test so you’re not burning budget before launch
A surprisingly common cost trap is paying for non-production environments longer than necessary. Consider using two levers with Azure Cosmos DB: Free Tier and the Emulator. Each subscription gets a set amount of throughput and storage free each month, and you can develop locally with the emulator at zero cloud cost.
Azure Cosmos DB reviewers on PeerSpot frequently mention ease of setup and cost management as part of the value story. A senior director of product management at Sitecore states that “the search, configuration, and ease of cost management have been a really great experience…Azure Cosmos DB has reduced our total cost of ownership significantly, allowing us to sell our product at extremely competitive pricing.”
In addition to easy setup and management, customers rely on Azure Cosmos DB to eliminate traditional database friction. Users benefit from:
- No schema management – flexible JSON data allowing schema management inside application code.
- Automatic indexing – no need for manual tuning
- Rich SDKs across all major languages including Python, node.JS, GO, .NET, Java and so on
- Serverless and autoscale – no need to manage capacity
Tip 2: Pick the right throughput mode early, then change it as needs evolve
Understanding Azure Cosmos DB service options and throughput modes is foundational, with free SKU, provisioned, and autoscale being distinct choices.
The eBook translates this into clear guidance:
- Use serverless when traffic is bursty or low volume
- Enable autoscale for production patterns where demand spikes, then drops
- Move to provisioned throughput when usage becomes steady and predictable
Novo Nordisk avoided paying for unused capacity, using serverless with a redesigned data model. Simon Kofod, Lead Software Developer at Novo Nordisk, said, “We went from a database that would set us back $240 per month to Azure Cosmos DB that costs less than a buck per month. And we can multiply this saving by four because we have four environments.”
Tip 3: If your AI traffic is spiky, autoscale is often the highest-impact cost lever
AI app demands tend to be uneven: launches, feature rollouts, prompt changes, batch jobs, or simply time-of-day usage can create bursts. Autoscale allows Azure Cosmos DB to scale up and down automatically within a defined range, helping you avoid overprovisioning for peak capacity that you rarely use. For workloads with steady, predictable usage, manual provisioned throughput or reserved capacity may deliver better long-term efficiency.
Kinectify’s platform sees “very spiky load patterns,” and they describe their goal clearly: scale up fast, scale down when quiet, optimize cost.
Michael Calvin, CTO of Kinectify, said, “We have large volumes of data coming in and very spiky load patterns. So we needed a solution that could scale quickly and also scale down when we weren’t receiving those traffic patterns so we can optimize cost… auto-scaling has been invaluable for optimizing both cost and performance on our platform daily.”
Kinectify also implemented a tenant-based logical partition and paired it with autoscale so they could share throughput across tenants while keeping the platform efficient.
Tip 4: Treat partitioning as a cost decision, not just a scale decision
Partition strategy determines whether your queries stay efficient or fan out across physical partitions. John Savill explicitly calls out partition key importance and high cardinality.
Veeam’s implementation connects cost directly to partition-aware architecture and search scope: “What Azure Cosmos DB does for us is deliver low operational overhead with infinite scaling capability… We can narrow down our search to a very limited space within physical partitions, and this saves costs and decreases the latency,” (Zack Rossman, Staff Software Engineer, Veeam).
Veeam used autoscale plus a hierarchical partitioning strategy to distribute billions of items without hot spots, keeping queries efficient at massive scale.
Shahid Syed, director of technology, at Unite Digital, touts Azure Cosmos DB partition-based scaling has having “significantly reduced costs of over $25,000 per month with minimal effort.”
Tip 5: Optimize RU consumption by aligning data models, queries, and indexing with access patterns
Request Units, or RU/s, are the currency of Azure Cosmos DB. Every read, write, and query consumes RU/s, and inefficient operations increase costs even if throughput looks reasonable on paper.
John Savill emphasizes the importance of understanding which operations consume the most RUs and why. AI applications often rely on complex queries, vector searches, or high-volume reads and writes, all of which can drive RU usage if not carefully designed. Reducing document size where possible can lower storage costs and reduce RU consumption for reads and writes. In some scenarios, separating large embeddings from frequently accessed metadata can lead to more efficient access patterns.
The goal is not to prematurely optimize, but to ensure that document design reflects how data is actually used by inference paths, retrieval workflows, and downstream systems.
Novo Nordisk found a concrete modeling change reduced consumption and improved performance: instead of storing tasks as separate documents, they redesigned so an entire checklist and tasks lived in a single document.
RU consumption is not driven by queries alone – it is a combined effect of data modeling, indexing strategy, and how consistently your access patterns align with your partitioning model.
Tip 6: Avoid paying for extra services you don’t need in your AI retrieval pipeline
Running multiple databases for related workloads or vector search often introduces unnecessary cost and complexity: duplicate throughput, fragmented data access, and higher operational overhead. By consolidating related datasets into a single Azure Cosmos DB account, teams can significantly improve cost efficiency without sacrificing scale or performance.
Lead Cloud Architect at Solliance Joel Hullen says, “[H]aving the vector store in Microsoft Azure Cosmos DB makes a lot of sense because the vector store lives in line with the data. It is in the same workspace and the same region. We do not have to worry about ingress and egress charges because with it being co-located with our data, we are going to have better performance.”
Consolidation allows you to:
- Share throughput (RU/s) across workloads instead of over-provisioning each database independently
- Reduce management and monitoring overhead by operating within a unified data plane
- Enable simpler querying and data access patterns when applications need to reason across datasets
- Eliminate duplicate infrastructure costs that add up quickly as systems scale
This pattern is particularly effective for SaaS platforms, internal line-of-business apps, and analytics-heavy workloads where datasets are highly related and benefit from centralized access.
Tip 7: Keep multi-region setups aligned to actual traffic patterns
Multi-region is a superpower but it can quickly become expensive if regions are added by default rather than based on actual user demand. To keep costs under control, Azure Cosmos DB multi‑region setups should be intentionally aligned to where traffic is truly coming from.
A cost‑aware multi‑region strategy includes:
- Adding regions only where there is sustained read or write traffic, rather than pre‑provisioning global coverage
- Regularly reviewing per‑region usage metrics to identify regions that are underutilized
- Using a single write region with selective read regions when user activity is geographically skewed
- Removing or consolidating regions as traffic patterns change over time
Check out how provisioned throughput multiplies across regions and how to reason about the multi-region cost model.
Scale AI without the surprise bill
Azure Cosmos DB provides the foundation required to build low-latency AI apps that reach any scale. The insights above underscore an important point. Cost efficiency comes from intentional design, not shortcuts.
By choosing the right throughput model, optimizing RU usage, designing effective partitions, and having setups align to how apps behave in the real world, teams can support demanding AI workloads without sacrificing financial predictability.
The result is an AI-ready data platform that grows with your ambitions and stays aligned with your budget.
About Azure Cosmos DB
Azure Cosmos DB is a fully managed and serverless NoSQL and vector database for modern app development, including AI applications. With its SLA-backed speed and availability as well as instant dynamic scalability, it is ideal for real-time NoSQL and MongoDB applications that require high performance and distributed computing over massive volumes of NoSQL and vector data.
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