Best Function as a Service (FaaS) Providers in New Zealand

Compare the Top Function as a Service (FaaS) Providers in New Zealand as of March 2026

What are Function as a Service (FaaS) Providers in New Zealand?

Function as a Service (FaaS) providers are cloud computing services that allow developers to execute small units of code, or functions, in response to events without managing the underlying infrastructure. These providers offer a serverless architecture where the scaling, monitoring, and management of infrastructure are handled automatically, allowing developers to focus on writing code. FaaS platforms typically charge based on the number of executions and the duration of the function, making it a cost-efficient option for event-driven applications, microservices, and real-time data processing. Compare and read user reviews of the best Function as a Service (FaaS) providers in New Zealand currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    Yandex Cloud Functions
    Run code as a function in a secure, fault-tolerant, and automatically scalable environment without creating or maintaining VMs. As the number of function calls increases, the service automatically creates additional instances of your function. All functions run in parallel. The runtime environment is hosted in three availability zones, ensuring availability even if one zone fails. Configure and prepare instances of functions always ready to process loads. This mode allows you to avoid cold starts and quickly process loads of any size. Give functions access to your VPC to accelerate interactions with private resources, database clusters, virtual machines, Kubernetes nodes, etc. Serverless Functions tracks and logs information about function calls and analyzes execution flow and performance. You can also describe logging mechanisms in your function code. Launch cloud functions in synchronized mode and delayed execution mode.
    Starting Price: $0.012240 per GB
  • 2
    IronFunctions
    ​IronFunctions is an open source serverless platform, also known as a Functions-as-a-Service (FaaS) platform, that allows developers to write functions in any language and deploy them across various environments, including public, private, and hybrid clouds. It supports AWS Lambda function formats, enabling seamless import and execution of existing Lambda functions. Designed for both developers and operators, IronFunctions simplifies coding by allowing the creation of small, focused functions without the need to manage the underlying infrastructure. Operators benefit from efficient resource utilization, as functions consume resources only during execution, and the platform's scalability is managed by adding more IronFunctions nodes as needed. It is built using Go and leverages container technologies to handle incoming workloads by spinning up new containers, processing the payloads, and returning responses.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 3
    Oracle Cloud Functions
    ​Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Functions is a serverless computing service that enables developers to create, run, and scale applications without managing infrastructure. Built on the open source Fn Project, it supports multiple programming languages, including Python, Go, Java, Node.js, and C#, allowing for flexible function development. Developers can deploy code directly, with OCI handling automatic provisioning and scaling of resources. It offers provisioned concurrency to maintain low-latency execution, ensuring functions are ready to accept calls instantly. A catalog of prebuilt functions is available, enabling rapid deployment of common tasks without the need to write code from scratch. Functions are packaged as Docker images, and advanced users can utilize Dockerfiles to customize runtime environments. Integration with Oracle Identity and Access Management provides fine-grained access control, while OCI Vault securely stores sensitive configuration data.
    Starting Price: $0.0000002 per month
  • 4
    IBM Cloud Functions
    Based on Apache OpenWhisk, IBM Cloud Functions is a polyglot functions-as-a-service (FaaS) programming platform for developing lightweight code that scalably executes on demand. IBM Cloud Functions offers access to the Apache OpenWhisk ecosystem, where anyone can contribute code. IBM Cloud Functions enables developers to build apps with action sequences that execute in response to events. IBM Cloud Functions makes cognitive analysis of application data inherent to your workflows. Costs increase only as you construct more OpenWhisk-intensive solutions or need to support larger workloads.
  • 5
    EdgeWorkers
    Akamai's EdgeWorkers is a serverless computing platform that enables developers to deploy custom JavaScript code at the edge, optimizing user experiences by executing logic closer to end users. This approach reduces latency by eliminating high-latency calls to origin servers, enhancing performance, and improving security by moving exposed client-side logic to the edge. EdgeWorkers supports various use cases, including AB testing, geolocation-based content delivery, data protection, privacy compliance, dynamic website personalization, traffic management, and device-based personalization. Developers can write JavaScript code and deploy it via API, CLI, or GUI, leveraging Akamai's scalable architecture that automatically manages infrastructure during growth or traffic spikes. The platform integrates with Akamai's EdgeKV, a distributed key-value store, enabling data-driven applications with low-latency data access.
  • 6
    AWS Lambda
    Run code without thinking about servers. Pay only for the compute time you consume. AWS Lambda lets you run code without provisioning or managing servers. You pay only for the compute time you consume. With Lambda, you can run code for virtually any type of application or backend service - all with zero administration. Just upload your code and Lambda takes care of everything required to run and scale your code with high availability. You can set up your code to automatically trigger from other AWS services or call it directly from any web or mobile app. AWS Lambda automatically runs your code without requiring you to provision or manage servers. Just write the code and upload it to Lambda. AWS Lambda automatically scales your application by running code in response to each trigger. Your code runs in parallel and processes each trigger individually, scaling precisely with the size of the workload.
  • 7
    OpenFaaS

    OpenFaaS

    OpenFaaS

    Serverless functions, made simple. OpenFaaS® makes it simple to deploy both functions and existing code to Kubernetes. Avoid lock-in through the use of Docker. Run-on any public or private cloud. Build both microservices & functions in any language. Legacy code and binaries. Auto-scale for demand or to zero when idle. Bring your laptop, your own on-prem hardware, or create a cluster in the cloud. Let Kubernetes do the heavy lifting enabling you to build a scalable, fault-tolerant event-driven serverless platform for your applications. You can try out OpenFaaS in 60 seconds or write and deploy your first Python function in around 10-15 minutes. From there you can take the OpenFaaS workshop, a series of tried-and-tested self-paced labs which teach you everything you need to know about functions, and more. An ecosystem for sharing, reusing, and collaborating on functions. Reduce boilerplate code, and share code in the templates store.
  • 8
    NVIDIA Cloud Functions
    NVIDIA Cloud Functions (NVCF) is a serverless API designed to deploy and manage AI workloads on GPUs, providing security, scalability, and reliability. It supports HTTP polling, HTTP streaming, and gRPC protocols for accessing workloads. Cloud Functions is primarily suited for shorter-running, preemptable workloads such as inferencing and fine-tuning. It supports two function types: "Container" and "Helm Chart", allowing users to define functions based on their specific requirements. Workloads are ephemeral and preemptable, so users should ensure they save their work appropriately. Models, containers, helm charts, and additional resources are hosted and pulled from the NGC Private Registry. To get started, users can follow the functions quickstart guide, which provides an end-to-end workflow for creating and deploying a container-based function using the fastapi_echo_sample container.
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