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Support Policy and Service Level Agreement

Last Updated: February 24, 2026 | Previous Versions

This Support Policy describes Snowflake’s support and Service level offering in connection with Errors.  Snowflake shall provide Support in accordance with this Support Policy and the Agreement. Customer shall receive the Support Level as designated in the applicable Order Form. However, Snowflake may provide more limited support for free trial and evaluation use of the Service in its discretion. Snowflake may update this Support Policy from time to time.

Capitalized terms not defined in this Support Policy have the meaning given to them in the Agreement (including its associated addenda, policies and other terms referenced therein).

I. Support

A. Testing. As further described in the Documentation, Snowflake has processes designed to perform robust testing and validation before each Service release to minimize Errors.

B. General Support Offering. Customer shall designate at least one Primary Contact; the Primary Contact may designate Customer Contact(s). Snowflake shall provide English-speaking remote assistance to Customer Contacts for questions or issues arising from any Error, as further described in this Support Policy, including troubleshooting, diagnosis, and recommendations for potential workarounds for the Subscription Term. Snowflake shall also provide the specific entitlements for the corresponding Support Level procured by Customer, as further described in this Support Policy and the tables below. Snowflake’s Support team shall implement follow-the-sun case management for handling Severity Level 1 Support Cases to better facilitate uninterrupted support by utilizing Snowflake Support across multiple time zones. If Customer reasonably believes Snowflake Support is failing to provide timely and commercially reasonable responses in accordance with this Support Policy, Customer may escalate the Support Case using the support escalation process described in the Snowflake Community.  Escalated Support Cases will be directed to Snowflake’s management team for consideration.

C. Contacting Snowflake Support. Customer Contacts may contact Snowflake Support for assistance with Support Cases by the following methods: (1) submitting a Support request in the web interface of the Service as described in the Documentation; (2) submitting a Support request to the Snowflake Community; or (3) if unable to access the web interface or the Snowflake Community, Customer Contacts may contact Snowflake Support by phone at the intake phone number identified in the Snowflake Community solely for purposes of having the Support request submitted on their behalf. All Customer Contacts must be reasonably proficient in the use and functionality of the Service and familiar with the Documentation, and shall use reasonable diligence to ensure a perceived Error is not an issue with Customer equipment, software, or internet connectivity.

D. Submission of Support Cases. Each Support Case shall: (1) designate the Severity Level of the Error in accordance with the definitions in Table 1; (2) identify the Account that experienced the error; (3) include information sufficiently detailed to allow Snowflake Support to effectively assess the Error (including any relevant error messages, but not export-controlled data, personal data (other than as required herein), sensitive data, other regulated data, or Customer Data); and (4) provide accurate contact information for the Customer Contact(s) most familiar with the issue. The Customer Contact(s) shall also give Snowflake any other important Support Case information in a timely manner. Information submitted pursuant to a Support Case is not Customer Data. Unless Customer expressly designates the Severity Level, the Support Case will have a default designation of Severity Level 4. If Customer believes the issue to be related to Client Software (as defined in the Agreement), then the Support Case shall also include the applicable Client Software log files. If a Customer Contact submits a Support Case related to enhancement or feature requests, Snowflake will deem the Support Case closed once the request has been forwarded internally.

E. Priority Support. If Customer has procured Priority Support, in addition to providing Snowflake Support, Snowflake Support shall: (i) implement follow-the-sun case management for handling Severity Level 1 and Severity Level 2 Support Cases, to better facilitate uninterrupted support by utilizing Snowflake Support across multiple time zones; and (ii) provide Customer the additional Support described in the Priority Support Services Description.

F. Third Party Users Support. For clarity with respect to Snowflake’s data-sharing functionality, Third Party Users may not be designated as Customer Contacts, and any Support Cases related to Customer, in its role as a Provider or with respect to any of its Third Party Users, shall be submitted solely by Customer’s own Customer Contacts.

G. Other Support and Training. Snowflake also offers various support and training resources such as documentation, community forums, FAQs and user guides available on the Snowflake Community. Additionally, Snowflake offers fee-based consultation and training services via Statements of Work.

Table 1: Error Severity Level Definitions
Severity Level 1
(Critical Severity)
An Error that (a) renders the Service completely inoperative, or (b) makes Customer’s use of material features of the Service impossible, with no alternative available.
Severity Level 2
(High Severity)
An Error that (a) has a high impact to key portions of the Service, or (b) seriously impairs Customer’s use of material features of the Service and Customer cannot reasonably circumvent or avoid the Error on a temporary basis without the expenditure of significant time or effort.
Severity Level 3
(Medium Severity)
An Error that has a medium-to-low impact on the Service, but Customer can still access and use some functionality of the Service.
Severity Level 4
(Low Severity)
An Error that has low-to-no impact on Customer’s access to and use of the Service.
Table 2: Severity Level Response Times
Error Severity Level Initial Response Time Target
Snowflake Support Priority Support
Severity Level 1
(Critical Severity)
One (1) hour Fifteen (15) Minutes
Severity Level 2
(High Severity)
Two (2) Business Hours Two (2) Hours
Severity Level 3
(Medium Severity)
One (1) Business Day Four (4) Business Hours
Severity Level 4
(Low Severity)
Two (2) Business Days One (1) Business Day

H. Error Response. Upon receipt of a Support Case, Snowflake Support will assess the Error based on the information submitted and the definitions in Table 1, and if Snowflake believes Customer’s Severity Level designation is incorrect, Snowflake will promptly notify Customer. If Customer then identifies a reasonable basis for disagreeing with the Severity Level proposed by Snowflake, the parties each will make a good faith effort to promptly discuss, escalate internally, and mutually agree on the appropriate Severity Level designation. Snowflake shall then use commercially reasonable efforts to meet the Initial Response Time Target set forth in Table 2 above for the applicable Severity Level.

Table 3: Global Snowflake Support Hours
Snowflake Service Region Snowflake Support & Priority Support Business Hours
Severity 1
(Snowflake Support)
Severity 1 & 2
(Priority Support)
Severity 2-4 (Snowflake Support)
Severity 3-4 (Priority Support)
North America 24x7x365 24x7x365 6AM-6PM PT Mon-Fri
EMEA 24x7x365 24x7x365 6AM-6PM CE Mon-Fri
Asia Pacific 24x7x365 24x7x365 6AM-6PM AEDT Mon-Fri

II. Service Level Agreement

Snowflake will provide the Service, but excluding Features, in accordance with the applicable Service Level. In the event of a Service Level Failure, Customer, as its sole and exclusive remedy, shall receive Service Level Credits credited against Customer’s usage in the applicable Cloud Provider Region in the immediately succeeding calendar month following the Service Level Failure, provided that Customer requests such Service Level Credits within twenty-one (21) days of the calendar month in which the Service Level Failure occurred. The number of Service Level Credits credited to Customer will be calculated using the Monthly Availability Percentage and Error Rate Threshold combination that provides Customer with the largest number of Service Level Credits set forth in Table 4.

Snowflake will provide Features in accordance with the applicable Feature Level. In the event of a Feature Level Failure, Customer, as its sole and exclusive remedy, shall receive Feature Level Credits in the immediately succeeding calendar month following the Feature Level Failure, subject to the terms and conditions in Appendix A, provided that Customer requests such Feature Level Credits within twenty-one (21) days of the calendar month in which the Feature Level Failure occurred, unless specified otherwise in Appendix A.

Service Level Credits and Feature Level Credits may not be exchanged for, or converted to, monetary amounts. Customer may not request, and will not be entitled to receive, Service Level Credits and Feature Level Credits for the same event(s). In the event a single event triggers a Service Level Failure and a Feature Level Failure, Customer shall be entitled to the single highest Snowflake Credit amount available for that event, but in no event shall the total credits exceed the amount that would have been due had only the Service Level or Feature Level applied.

Table 4: Service Level Credit Calculation
Monthly Availability Percentage Error Rate Threshold Service Level Credits
Under 99.99% but greater than or equal to 99.0%* 10% 1 x Average Daily Snowflake Credits
Under 99.9% but greater than or equal to 99.0%* 1% 1 x Average Daily Snowflake Credits
Under 99.0% but greater than or equal to 95.0% 1% 3 x Average Daily Snowflake Credits
Under 95.0% 1% 7 x Average Daily Snowflake Credits
*Customer may elect the combination of Monthly Availability Percentage and Error Rate Threshold that provides Customer with the largest number of Service Level Credits.

NOTE: This Table 4 applies to only Service Level Failures relating to Customer’s use of the Service, excluding Features; Feature Level Credits for Feature Level Failures relating to Customer’s use of Features are exclusively described in Appendix A.

Example Calculation – Customer has two Accounts (SFE1, SFE2) in the AWS US East Region. Each Account submits Valid Operations at a steady rate of 50 Valid Operations per minute. In the month of April, in each minute of a 250-minute period, all 50 Valid Operations submitted by SFE1 succeeded, whereas SFE2 experienced 2 Failed Operations out of a total of 50 Valid Operations. For the month of April, the Customer experienced an Error Rate of 2% across SFE1 and SFE2 Accounts in the AWS US East Region ((2 Failed Operations / 100 Valid Operations) * 100) during the 250-minute period. In this example, the Service was Unavailable for the period of 250 minutes because the Error Rate exceeded the 1% Error Rate Threshold across both Accounts even though it does not exceed the 10% Error Rate Threshold. There are 43,200 Calendar Minutes in the month of April (30 days x 24 hours x 60 minutes). This results in a Monthly Availability Percentage of 99.4% calculated as ((43,200 – 250)/43,200 * 100). According to Table 4, a customer experiencing a 99.4% Monthly Availability Percentage with an Error Rate of 2% will receive 1 x Average Daily Snowflake Credits. If Customer used a total of three hundred (300) Snowflake Credits across both Accounts in April, then Customer’s Average Daily Snowflake Credits for April would be ten (10) Snowflake Credits (300 / 30 days in April). Since the Monthly Availability Percentage is 99.4%, Customer would be entitled to request a Service Level Credit of ten (10) Snowflake Credits (1 x 10 Average Daily Snowflake Credits), which would be credited against Customer’s usage of the Service in May.

III.   Exclusions

Snowflake will have no liability for any failure to meet a Service Level or Feature Level to the extent arising from:

A.    Customer’s failure to process Customer Data in the Service in accordance with the Documentation and Snowflake’s recommendations for use of the Service — though, upon being notified of such a case, Snowflake will endeavor to help Customer address the failure (e.g., with additional recommendations);

B.    Equipment, software, or other technology not provided by Snowflake as part of the Service (e.g., External Offerings);

C.    Third-party acts, or services and/or systems not provided by or on behalf of Snowflake. For the avoidance of doubt, this exclusion (C) does not apply to the acts, services or systems of any Cloud Providers;

D.    Force Majeure events — i.e., any cause beyond such party’s reasonable control, including but not limited to acts of God, labor disputes or other industrial disturbances, systemic electrical, telecommunications, or other utility failures, earthquake, storms or other elements of nature, blockages, embargoes, riots, public health emergencies (including pandemics and epidemics), acts or orders of government, acts of terrorism, or war;

E.     Evaluation, free trial, or proof-of-concept use of the Service;

F.      Use of Service features or functionality that are subject to Preview Terms (e.g., beta functionality not intended for production use);

G.     Violations of the Agreement by Customer;

H.     Suspension or termination of Customer’s right to use the Service in accordance with the Agreement; or

I.       Only with respect to the feature of the Service known as “Snowpark Container Services” (as further described in the Documentation), periods during: (i) any scheduled maintenance as described in the Documentation, or (ii) implementation of any critical upgrades.

IV. Definitions

“Agreement” is defined as the applicable written subscription agreement between Snowflake and Customer for the Service.

“Average Daily Snowflake Credits” is defined as Customer’s actual Snowflake Credit consumption for the Service (but excluding consumption for Features) in the calendar month of the Cloud Provider Region in which the Service Level Failure occurred, divided by the number of days in such month.

“Business Day” is defined as each in-Region day that has Business Hours.

“Business Hours” is defined as the Snowflake Support hours set forth in Table 3 above for the applicable Region.

“Calendar Minutes” is defined as the total number of minutes in a given calendar month.

“Cloud Provider” has the meaning given that term in the Snowflake Service Consumption Table.

“Cloud Provider Region” is defined as the Region and Cloud Provider selected by Customer on an Order Form or as configured by Customer via the Service.

“Customer Contact(s)” is defined as those additional individuals designated by the Primary Contact for purposes of submitting Support Cases.

“Downtime” means the minutes during a given calendar month when the Service cannot be accessed by Customer via a user interface, as described in the Documentation, due to server-side errors.

“Error(s)” is defined as Customer-reported bugs, defects or errors in the Service.

“Error Rate” is defined as the number of Failed Operations, divided by the total number of Valid Operations. Repeated identical Failed Operations do not count towards the Error Rate.

“Error Rate Threshold” is the value set forth in the applicable table below for each applicable Monthly Availability Percentage.  This value represents the maximum Error Rate before a minute is considered Unavailable.

“Failed Operations” is defined as Valid Operations where the Service returns an internal error to Customer, subject to Section III (SLA Exclusions) above.    

“Feature” is defined as a feature of the Service for which Snowflake calculates a separate Feature Level, as described in Appendix A, including Snowflake Postgres. 

“Feature Level” is defined as the availability commitment(s) for a Feature, as described in Appendix A.

"Feature Level Credits" is defined as the number of Snowflake Credits Customer will receive in the event of a Feature Level Failure, as described in Appendix A.

"Feature Level Failure" is defined as a Feature failing to meet the applicable Feature Level in a given month.

“Monthly Availability Percentage” is defined as the difference between Calendar Minutes and the sum of (Unavailable Minutes + Downtime) using the relevant Error Rate Threshold, divided by Calendar Minutes, and multiplied by one hundred (100). 

“Primary Contact” is defined as the individual designated by Customer who will have administrator privileges for purposes of submitting Support Cases.

“Priority Support” is defined as Snowflake’s enhanced Support offering.

“Priority Support Services Description” is defined as the additional Support described in the Priority Support Services Description located at www.snowflake.com/en/legal/ (or such successor URL as may be designated by Snowflake), which description is incorporated herein by this reference.

“Region” has the meaning given to that term in the Snowflake Service Consumption Table.

“Service Level” is defined as the applicable Monthly Availability Percentage when measured with the corresponding Error Rate Threshold as further described in Table 4.

"Service Level Failure" is defined as the Service, excluding Features, failing to meet the Service Level in a given month.

"Service Level Credits" is defined as the number of Snowflake Credits Customer will receive in the event of a Service Level Failure for a given Monthly Availability Percentage and Error Rate Threshold, as indicated in the applicable table below.

“Snowflake Community” is defined as the Snowflake web page hosting the community forums and Support portal located at https://community.snowflake.com (or such successor URL as may be designated by Snowflake).

“Snowflake Credits” has the meaning given to that term in the Snowflake Service Consumption Table.

“Snowflake Service Consumption Table” is defined as the Snowflake Service Consumption Table located at https://www.snowflake.com/en/legal/ (or such successor URL as may be designated by Snowflake).

“Snowflake Support” is defined as Snowflake’s general Support offering[1].

“Support” is defined as technical support for the Service as provided by Snowflake.

“Support Case” is defined as a request for help with a Service-related issue as submitted by Customer to Snowflake Support for resolution.

“Support Level” is defined as the level of Support Customer receives as designated in the applicable Order Form.

“Support Policy” is defined as this Snowflake Support Policy and Service Level Agreement.

“Unavailable” is defined as an Error Rate greater than the relevant Error Rate Threshold over a one-minute interval calculated across all Accounts within each applicable Cloud Provider Region. For clarity, (i) the Error Rate is 0 when an Account is inactive, i.e., when there are no Valid Operations in the one-minute interval.

“Unavailable Minutes” is defined as the total accumulated minutes when the Service is Unavailable using the relevant Error Rate Threshold. 

“Valid Operation” is defined as an operation that conforms to (a) the Documentation or (b) Service-use recommendations provided by Snowflake Support personnel.

[1] Formerly known as Premier Support

APPENDIX A
FEATURE-SPECIFIC TERMS

Capitalized terms not defined in this Appendix A have the meaning given to them in the Support Policy. 

I.          SNOWFLAKE POSTGRES

Snowflake will make each Snowflake Postgres database instance with the “High-Availability” deployment option selected, as described in the Documentation, (each, an “HA Instance”) available with a Monthly HA Instance Availability Percentage as shown in the table below during any calendar month (“Snowflake Postgres Feature Level”). In the event of Snowflake’s failure to meet the Snowflake Postgres Feature Level (a “Snowflake Postgres Feature Level Failure”), Customer, as its sole and exclusive remedy, shall receive Feature Level Credits credited against Customer’s usage of the affected HA Instance in the immediately succeeding calendar month following the failure, provided that Customer requests such Feature Level Credits within twenty-one (21) days of the calendar month in which such failure occurred, as described in Table 5 below.

Snowflake will have no liability for any Snowflake Postgres Feature Level Failure to the extent arising from: (i) any of the exclusions set forth in Section III of the Support Policy; (ii) Snowflake Postgres database instances that are “burstable” instances, as described in the Documentation; (iii) resource exhaustion (e.g., CPU, memory, IOPS, or storage) resulting from Customer’s workloads; (iv) Customer-initiated restarts or Customer misconfigurations of HA Instances; (v) underlying Postgres database engine software causing repeated database crashes or an inoperable HA Instance; or (vi) scheduled maintenance initiated by the customer or by Snowflake, as described in the Documentation. For the avoidance of doubt, Snowflake Postgres database instances that are not HA Instances are not subject to the Service Level or Snowflake Postgres Feature Level.

Table 5: Feature Level Credit Calculation for Snowflake Postgres Feature Level

Monthly HA Instance Availability Percentage

Feature Level Credits

Less than 99.95% but equal to or greater than 99.0%

3x Average Daily HA Instance Credits

Less than 99.0% but equal to or greater than 95.0%

7x Average Daily HA Instance Credits

Less than 95.0%

Total HA Instance Credits

NOTE: This Table 5 solely applies to, and is Customer’s sole recourse for, Snowflake Postgres Feature Level Failures; Service Level Credits for Service Level Failures relating to Customer’s use of the Service generally are exclusively described in Section II of the Support Policy.

“Average Daily HA Instance Credits” is defined as Customer’s actual Snowflake Credit consumption for a given HA Instance in the calendar month in which the Snowflake Postgres Feature Level Failure occurred, divided by the number of days in such month.

“HA Instance Downtime” is defined as the total number of one-minute intervals during a given calendar month in which all connection requests to the applicable running HA Instance fail.

"Monthly HA Instance Availability Percentage" for a given HA Instance is defined as the difference between Calendar Minutes and HA Instance Downtime, divided by the Calendar Minutes, and multiplied by one hundred (100).

“Total HA Instance Credits” is defined as Customer’s actual Snowflake Credit consumption for a given HA Instance in the calendar month in which the Snowflake Postgres Feature Level Failure occurred.

Previous Versions

2026

January 9, 2026 – Support Policy and Service Level Agreement

2025

March 10, 2025 – Support Policy and Service Level Agreement

2024

July 31, 2024 – Support Policy and Service Level Agreement

2022

October 7, 2022 – Support Policy and Service Level Agreement

June 1, 2022 – Support Policy and Service Level Agreement

2021

December 10, 2021 – Support Policy and Service Level Agreement

September 29, 2021 – Support Policy and Service Level Agreement

May 1, 2021 – Support Policy and Service Level Agreement

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