Learn how Neon compares to Aurora Serverless v2 - TL;DR: faster cold starts, responsive autoscaling, 80% lower costs
Docs/Partner guide/Query consumption metrics

Querying consumption metrics

Learn how to get a variety of consumption metrics using the Neon API

Using the Neon API, you can query a range of account-level and project-level metrics to help gauge your resource consumption.

To learn more about which metrics you can get reports on, see Available metrics on the Manage billing with consumption limits page.

Here are the different ways to retrieve these metrics, depending on how you want them aggregated or broken down:

EndpointDescriptionPlan Availability
Account-level cumulative metricsAggregates all metrics from all projects in an account into a single cumulative number for each metricScale and Business plan only
Granular project-level metricsProvides detailed metrics for each project in an account at a specified granularity level (e.g., hourly, daily, monthly)Scale and Business plan only
Single project metricsRetrieves detailed metrics and quota information for a specific projectAll plans

Get account-level aggregated metrics

Using the Get account consumption metrics API, you can find total usage across all projects in your organization. This provides a comprehensive view of consumption metrics accumulated for the billing period.

Here is the URL in the Neon API where you can get account-level metrics:

https://console.neon.tech/api/v2/consumption_history/account

This API endpoint accepts the following query parameters: from, to, granularity, org_id, and include_v1_metrics.

Choosing your account

Include the unique org_id for your organization to retrieve account metrics for that specific organization. If not specified, metrics for your personal account will be returned.

For more information about this upcoming feature, see Organizations.

Set a date range for granular results

You can set from and to query parameters, plus a level of granularity to define a time range that can span across multiple billing periods.

  • from — Sets the start date and time of the time period for which you are seeking metrics.
  • to — Sets the end date and time for the interval for which you desire metrics.
  • granularity — Sets the level of granularity for the metrics, such as hourly, daily, or monthly.

The response is organized by periods and consumption data within the specified time range.

See Details on setting a date range for more info.

Get granular project-level metrics for your account

You can also get similar daily, hourly, or monthly metrics across a selected time period, but broken out for each individual project that belongs to your organization.

Using the endpoint GET /consumption_history/projects, let's use the same start date, end date, and level of granularity as our account-level request: hourly metrics between June 30th and July 2nd, 2024.

curl --request GET \
     --url 'https://console.neon.tech/api/v2/consumption_history/projects?limit=10&from=2024-06-30T00%3A00%3A00Z&to=2024-07-02T00%3A00%3A00Z&granularity=hourly&org_id=org-ocean-art-12345678' \
     --header 'accept: application/json' \
     --header 'authorization: Bearer $NEON_API_KEY'
Response body
{
  "projects": [
    {
      "project_id": "random-project-123456",
      "periods": [
        {
          "period_id": "random-period-abcdef",
          "consumption": [
            {
              "timeframe_start": "2024-06-30T00:00:00Z",
              "timeframe_end": "2024-06-30T01:00:00Z",
              "active_time_seconds": 147472,
              "compute_time_seconds": 43222,
              "written_data_bytes": 112730864,
              "synthetic_storage_size_bytes": 37000959232
            },
            {
              "timeframe_start": "2024-07-01T00:00:00Z",
              "timeframe_end": "2024-07-01T01:00:00Z",
              "active_time_seconds": 1792,
              "compute_time_seconds": 533,
              "written_data_bytes": 0,
              "synthetic_storage_size_bytes": 0
            }
            // ... More consumption data
          ]
        },
        {
          "period_id": "random-period-ghijkl",
          "consumption": [
            {
              "timeframe_start": "2024-07-01T09:00:00Z",
              "timeframe_end": "2024-07-01T10:00:00Z",
              "active_time_seconds": 150924,
              "compute_time_seconds": 44108,
              "written_data_bytes": 114912552,
              "synthetic_storage_size_bytes": 36593552376
            }
            // ... More consumption data
          ]
        }
        // ... More periods
      ]
    }
    // ... More projects
  ]
}

The response is organized by periods and consumption data within the specified time range.

See Details on setting a date range for more info.

Pagination

To control pagination (number of results per response), you can include these query parameters:

  • limit — sets the number of project objects to be included in the response.
  • cursor — by default, the response uses the project id from the last project in the list as the cursor value (included in the pagination object at the end of the response). Generally, it is up to the application to collect and use this cursor value when setting up the next request.

See Details on pagination for more info.

Get metrics for a single specified project

Using a GET request from the Neon API (see Get project details), you can find the following consumption details for a given project:

  • Current consumption metrics accumulated for the billing period
  • Start and end dates for the billing period
  • Current usage quotas (max limits) configured for the project

Using these details, you can set up the logic for when to send notification warnings, when to reset a quota, and other possible actions related to the pending or current suspension of a project's active computes.

Here is an example a GET request for an individual project.

curl --request GET \
     --url https://console.neon.tech/api/v2/projects/[project_ID] \
     --header 'Accept: application/json' \
     --header "Authorization: Bearer $NEON_API_KEY" | jq

And here is what the response might look like.

Response body
{
  "project": {
    "data_storage_bytes_hour": 1040,
    "data_transfer_bytes": 680000000,
    "written_data_bytes": 68544000,
    "compute_time_seconds": 68400,
    "active_time_seconds": 75000,
    "cpu_used_sec": 7200,
    "id": "[project_ID]",
    "platform_id": "aws",
    "region_id": "aws-us-east-2",
    "name": "UserProject",
    "provisioner": "k8s-pod",
    "default_endpoint_settings": {
      "autoscaling_limit_min_cu": 1,
      "autoscaling_limit_max_cu": 1,
      "suspend_timeout_seconds": 0
    },
    "settings": {
      "quota": {
        "active_time_seconds": 108000,
        "compute_time_seconds": 72000
      }
    },
    "pg_version": 15,
    "proxy_host": "us-east-2.aws.neon.tech",
    "branch_logical_size_limit": 204800,
    "branch_logical_size_limit_bytes": 214748364800,
    "store_passwords": true,
    "creation_source": "console",
    "history_retention_seconds": 604800,
    "created_at": "2023-10-29T16:48:31Z",
    "updated_at": "2023-10-29T16:48:31Z",
    "synthetic_storage_size": 0,
    "consumption_period_start": "2023-10-01T00:00:00Z",
    "consumption_period_end": "2023-11-01T00:00:00Z",
    "owner_id": "1232111",
    "owner": {
      "email": "some@email.com",
      "branches_limit": -1,
      "subscription_type": "free"
    }
  }
}

Looking at this response, here are some conclusions we can draw:

  • This project is 1 hour away from being suspended.

    With current compute_time_seconds at 68,400 (19 hours) and the quota for that metric set at 72,000 (20 hours), the project is only 1 hour of compute time away from being suspended.

  • This project is 1 day away from a quota refresh.

    If today's date is October 31st, 2023, and the consumption_period_end parameter is 2023-11-01T00:00:00Z (November 1st, 2023), then the project has 1 day left before all quota parameters (except for logical_byte_size) are refreshed.

Details on setting a date range

This section applies to the following metrics output types: Account-level aggregated metrics, and Granular project-level metrics for your account.

You can set from and to query parameters, plus a level of granularity to define a time range that can span across multiple billing periods.

  • from — Sets the start date and time of the time period for which you are seeking metrics.
  • to — Sets the end date and time for the interval for which you desire metrics.
  • granularity — Sets the level of granularity for the metrics, such as hourly, daily, or monthly.

The response is organized by periods and consumption data within the specified time range.

Here is an example query that returns metrics from June 30th to July 2nd, 2024. Time values must be provided in ISO 8601 format. You can use this timestamp converter.

curl --request GET \
     --url 'https://console.neon.tech/api/v2/consumption_history/account?from=2024-06-30T15%3A30%3A00Z&to=2024-07-02T15%3A30%3A00Z&granularity=hourly&org_id=org-ocean-art-12345678' \
     --header 'accept: application/json' \
     --header 'authorization: Bearer $NEON_API_KEY'

And here is a sample response:

Response body
{
  "periods": [
    {
      "period_id": "random-period-abcdef",
      "consumption": [
        {
          "timeframe_start": "2024-06-30T15:00:00Z",
          "timeframe_end": "2024-06-30T16:00:00Z",
          "active_time_seconds": 147452,
          "compute_time_seconds": 43215,
          "written_data_bytes": 111777920,
          "synthetic_storage_size_bytes": 41371988928
        },
        {
          "timeframe_start": "2024-06-30T16:00:00Z",
          "timeframe_end": "2024-06-30T17:00:00Z",
          "active_time_seconds": 147468,
          "compute_time_seconds": 43223,
          "written_data_bytes": 110483584,
          "synthetic_storage_size_bytes": 41467955616
        }
        // ... More consumption data
      ]
    },
    {
      "period_id": "random-period-ghijkl",
      "consumption": [
        {
          "timeframe_start": "2024-07-01T00:00:00Z",
          "timeframe_end": "2024-07-01T01:00:00Z",
          "active_time_seconds": 145672,
          "compute_time_seconds": 42691,
          "written_data_bytes": 115110912,
          "synthetic_storage_size_bytes": 42194712672
        },
        {
          "timeframe_start": "2024-07-01T01:00:00Z",
          "timeframe_end": "2024-07-01T02:00:00Z",
          "active_time_seconds": 147464,
          "compute_time_seconds": 43193,
          "written_data_bytes": 110078200,
          "synthetic_storage_size_bytes": 42291858520
        }
        // ... More consumption data
      ]
    }
    // ... More periods
  ]
}

Details on pagination

This section applies to the following metrics output: Granular project-level metrics for your account.

To control pagination (number of results per response), you can include these query parameters:

  • limit — sets the number of project objects to be included in the response
  • cursor — by default, the response uses the project id from the last project in the list as the cursor value (included in the pagination object at the end of the response). Generally, it is up to the application to collect and use this cursor value when setting up the next request.

Here is an example GET request asking for the next 10 projects, starting with project id divine-tree-77657175:

curl --request GET \
     --url 'https://console.neon.tech/api/v2/consumption_history/projects?cursor=divine-tree-77657175&limit=100&granularity=daily' \
     --header 'accept: application/json' \
     --header 'authorization: Bearer $NEON_API_KEY' | jq

note

To learn more about using pagination to control large response sizes, the Keyset pagination page in the Microsoft docs gives a helpful overview.

Consumption polling FAQ

As an Neon partner or paid plan customer, you may have questions related to polling Neon's consumption APIs. We've provided answers to frequently asked questions here.

How often can you poll consumption data for usage reporting and billing?

Neon's consumption data is updated approximately every 15 minutes, so a minimum interval of 15 minutes between calls to our consumption APIs is recommended.

How often should consumption data be polled to report usage to customers?

As mentioned above, usage data can be pulled every 15 minutes, but partners are free to choose their own reporting interval based on their requirements.

How often should consumption data be polled to invoice end users?

Neon does not dictate how partners bill their users. Partners can use the data retrieved from the consumption API to generate invoices according to their own billing cycles and preferences.

Does consumption polling wake up computes?

Neon's consumption polling APIs do not wake computes that have been suspended due to inactivity. Therefore, calls to Neon's consumption APIs will not increase your users' consumption.

Last updated on

Was this page helpful?