Amazon SQS, Amazon SNS, or Amazon EventBridge?
Understand the differences and pick the one that's right for you
Purpose
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Understand the differences between Amazon SQS, Amazon SNS, and EventBridge
and determine which service is the best fit for your needs.
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Last updated
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July 31, 2024
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Covered services
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Introduction
When building applications on AWS, you might want help in choosing the
right service for handling messaging, event-driven architectures,
and decoupling components. AWS offers three key services for these
purposes—Amazon Simple Queue Service (Amazon SQS), Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS), and Amazon EventBridge (formerly
known as CloudWatch Events).
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Amazon SQS is a fully managed message queuing service that enables
decoupling and scaling of microservices, distributed systems,
and serverless applications.
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Amazon SNS is a highly available, durable, and secure pub/sub messaging
service that allows decoupled applications to communicate with
each other using a publish-subscribe model.
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Amazon EventBridge is a serverless event bus designed to make it easier
to build event-driven architectures by allowing you to connect
applications using data from various sources and route it to
targets like AWS Lambda.
While all three services facilitate communication between decoupled components,
they differ in their underlying architecture, use cases, and capabilities.
Here's a high-level view of the key differences between these services to get you started.
Category
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Amazon SQS
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Amazon SNS
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EventBridge
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Communication
model
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Pull-based (consumers poll messages from the queue)
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Push-based (subscribers receive messages when published)
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Pushed-based. Event-driven (rules match events and route to
targets)
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Persistence
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Messages persist until consumed or expired
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Messages do not persist; delivered in real-time to
subscribers
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Events do not persist; processed in real-time
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Delivery
guarantees
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At-least-once delivery
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At-least-once delivery for HTTP/S, exactly-once for Lambda
and Amazon SQS
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At-least-once delivery
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Message
ordering
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FIFO (First-In-First-Out) queues ensure strict ordering
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Amazon SNS FIFO topics guarantee order
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No ordering guarantees
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Message
filtering
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Amazon SQS can’t decide consumer based on message. Use Amazon SNS message
filtering with Amazon SQS to achieve.
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Message filtering using subscription filter policies based
on message metadata and for FIFO topics, message content
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Complex event pattern matching and content-based filtering
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Supported
subscribers
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Pull-based consumers (such as Amazon EC2 or Lambda)
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HTTP/S endpoints, email, SMS, mobile push, Lambda, Amazon SQS
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AWS services, Lambda, API destinations, event buses in other
AWS accounts
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Typical use
cases
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Decoupling microservices, buffering requests, processing
tasks asynchronously
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Fanout notifications, pub/sub messaging, mobile push
notifications
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Event-driven architectures, real-time stream processing,
cross-account event sharing
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Integration with
other AWS services
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Lambda, CloudWatch, AWS KMS, IAM
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Lambda, Amazon SQS, Mobile Push, AWS KMS, IAM
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Lambda, Step Functions, Amazon SQS, Amazon SNS, Kinesis, SageMaker AI,
CloudWatch, IAM
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Details on the differences
Explore differences between Amazon SQS, Amazon SNS, and EventBridge in eight key
areas. These cover communication model, persistence, message
ordering, filtering, integrations, use cases, scalability, and
pricing.
- Communication model
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Amazon SQS
Amazon SNS
Amazon EventBridge
- Persistence and delivery guarantees
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Amazon SQS
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Messages are persisted in the queue until consumed or
expired, ensuring no message loss. Provides at-least-once
delivery, guaranteeing that every message is delivered at least
once, with the possibility of duplicates.
Amazon SNS
Amazon EventBridge
- Message ordering
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Amazon SQS and Amazon SNS
Amazon EventBridge
- Message filtering and routing
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Amazon SQS
Amazon SNS
Amazon EventBridge
- Supported subscribers and integrations
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Amazon SQS
Amazon SNS
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Supports a wide range of subscribers, including HTTP/S
endpoints, email, SMS, mobile push notifications, Lambda
functions, and Amazon SQS queues.
Amazon EventBridge
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Integrates with numerous AWS services, such as
Lambda, Step Functions, Amazon SQS, Amazon SNS, Kinesis, and SageMaker AI,
allowing event routing based on predefined rules. EventBridge
also has numerous built-in integrations with third party
products such as PagerDuty, DataDog, NewRelilc. To see the
complete list visit
Amazon EventBridge targets.
- Typical use cases
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Amazon SQS
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Commonly used for decoupling microservices, buffering
requests, and processing tasks asynchronously, enabling
independent scaling and graceful failure handling.
Amazon SNS
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Often used for fanout notifications, pub/sub messaging, and
mobile push notifications, facilitating the broadcasting of
messages to multiple subscribers simultaneously.
Amazon EventBridge
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Ideal for building event-driven architectures,
real-time stream processing, and cross-account event sharing,
allowing reactive systems to be built across multiple services.
- Scalability and performance
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Amazon SQS
Amazon SNS
Amazon EventBridge
- Pricing
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Amazon SQS
Amazon SNS
Amazon EventBridge
Use
- Amazon SQS
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Get started with Amazon SQS
Get step-by-step instructions on setting up and using Amazon SQS. It covers topics such as
creating a queue, sending and receiving messages, and configuring queue properties.
Explore the
guide
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Amazon SQS tutorial
Walk through a practical example of using Amazon SQS to decouple the components of a simple
application. It demonstrates how to create a queue, send messages to the queue, and process
messages from the queue using AWS SDKs.
Explore the tutorial
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Orchestrate Queue-based Microservices
Learn how to design and run a serverless workflow that orchestrates a message queue-based microservice.
Explore the
tutorial
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Send Fanout Event Notifications
Learn how to implement a fanout messaging scenario using Amazon SQS and Amazon SNS.
Explore the tutorial
- Amazon SNS
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Get started with Amazon SNS
A step-by-step walkthrough of setting up and using Amazon SNS. It covers topics such as
creating a topic, subscribing endpoints to a topic, publishing messages, and configuring
access permissions.
Explore the
guide
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Filter Messages Published to Topics with Amazon SNS and Amazon SQS
Learn how to use the message filtering feature of Amazon SNS
Explore the
tutorial
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Amazon SNS - Troubleshooting
Learn how to view configuration information, monitor processes, and gather diagnostic data about Amazon SNS.
Explore the course
- EventBridge
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Amazon EventBridge User Guide
This comprehensive documentation covers topics such as creating event buses,
defining event rules, setting up targets, and integrating with various AWS services.
Explore the
guide
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Amazon EventBridge Tutorials
The AWS documentation offers a series of tutorials that walk users through
different use cases and scenarios using Amazon EventBridge. These tutorials cover topics like
scheduling automated tasks, reacting to changes in AWS resources, and integrating
with AWS services.
Explore the
tutorials
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AWS Serverless Workshops - Event-Driven
Architecture
Build event-driven architectures using Amazon EventBridge and other AWS serverless
services. This workshop guides participants through the process of creating event
buses, defining event rules, and triggering actions based on events.
Explore the
workshop
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AWS Online Tech Talk - Introduction to Amazon EventBridge
Get an introduction to Amazon EventBridge, explaining key concepts, features, and use cases.
The tech talk includes demonstrations and practical examples to help users understand
how to leverage EventBridge in their applications.
Watch the
video
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Building Event-Driven Applications with Amazon EventBridge
This blog post explores the process of building event-driven applications using
Amazon EventBridge. It provides a step-by-step guide on creating event buses, defining event
patterns, and setting up targets to process events.
Read the blog post
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Create Point-to-Point Integrations Between Event Producers and Consumers with Amazon EventBridge Pipes
Explore Amazon EventBridge Pipes, a feature of EventBridge that makes it easier for you to build event-driven applications by providing
a consistent and cost-effective way to create point-to-point integrations between event producers and consumers,
removing the need to write undifferentiated glue code.
Read the blog post