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Yes. If you are hosting it on an EC2, AWS has the Elastic IP service that provides you with a static IP on demand. Amazon docs explain it in detail. Just set up the eIP and point your DNS to that. ...
Answer
#3: Post edited
Yes. If you are hosting it on an EC2, AWS has the [Elastic IP service](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/elastic-ip-addresses-eip.html) that provides you with a static IP on demand. Amazon docs explain it in detail.- Note that you may be billed for eIPs, although I believe there is a way to use it for free in a limited capacity. This should also be in the docs ("pricing" section).
- Yes. If you are hosting it on an EC2, AWS has the [Elastic IP service](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/elastic-ip-addresses-eip.html) that provides you with a static IP on demand. Amazon docs explain it in detail. Just set up the eIP and point your DNS to that.
- Note that you may be billed for eIPs, although I believe there is a way to use it for free in a limited capacity. This should also be in the docs ("pricing" section).
#2: Post edited
- Yes. If you are hosting it on an EC2, AWS has the [Elastic IP service](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/elastic-ip-addresses-eip.html) that provides you with a static IP on demand. Amazon docs explain it in detail.
Note that you may be billed for eIPs, although I believe there is a way to use it for free in a limited capacity.
- Yes. If you are hosting it on an EC2, AWS has the [Elastic IP service](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/elastic-ip-addresses-eip.html) that provides you with a static IP on demand. Amazon docs explain it in detail.
- Note that you may be billed for eIPs, although I believe there is a way to use it for free in a limited capacity. This should also be in the docs ("pricing" section).
#1: Initial revision
Yes. If you are hosting it on an EC2, AWS has the [Elastic IP service](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/elastic-ip-addresses-eip.html) that provides you with a static IP on demand. Amazon docs explain it in detail. Note that you may be billed for eIPs, although I believe there is a way to use it for free in a limited capacity.