# Article Name 3 Ways to Calculate Annual Cost for Your Snowflake Account # Article Summary Explore three practical methods to calculate the annual cost of your Snowflake account and plan cloud data spend wisely today # Original HTML URL on Toriihq.com https://www.toriihq.com/articles/how-to-find-annual-cost-snowflake # Details Snowflake makes it easy to spin up warehouses, but the bill can grow fast when queries, stages, and tasks run day and night. Finance keeps asking why. We’ll walk through three clear methods you can use today to nail down your yearly spend, see what drives it, and set budgets with confidence. ## Use Snowflake's UI The steps below walk through Snowsight to surface the past year’s spend in minutes. ### 1. Sign in to Snowsight - Open the Snowflake web URL tied to your account. - Enter your username and password, then choose the role with ACCOUNTADMIN rights so you can see account-wide data. Snowflake’s docs note that only roles with usage privileges on the ACCOUNTUSAGE schema can see full cost data. ### 2. Go to the Usage area - Scan the left navigation bar. - Click Admin, then select Usage. Snowflake’s help site calls this the central spot for spend, credit, and storage tracking across the account. ### 3. Change the date range to a full year - Near the top, find the filter labeled Date Range. - Open it and pick Past 12 Months. The charts and tables update immediately, giving you a full year of activity at a glance. Use Custom if your fiscal year follows a different calendar. ### 4. Read the headline numbers - The summary tiles show Total Credits and Total Cost in your billing currency. - Because compute, storage, and cloud-services credits are already combined, the numbers represent your full annual spend. ### 5. Drill into cost by category - Just under the summary, toggle between the Compute, Storage, and Cloud Services tabs. - Each tab lists: - Usage by warehouse or database - Credits burned - Actual dollar cost This breakdown highlights the parts of the platform that drive the bill, making optimization efforts easier to target. ### 6. Inspect month-over-month trends - Scroll to the bar chart labeled Monthly Usage. - Hover over any bar to see the exact credits and cost figure for that month. - The visual quickly reveals seasonal swings or unexpected spikes. ### 7. Export the data (optional) - In the upper right corner, click the download icon. - Choose CSV for raw data or PNG for a slide-ready image. Snowflake’s documentation confirms that exports keep the date filter you set, so your numbers remain consistent. ### 8. Log out or switch roles - When finished, click your profile icon and Sign Out, or swap back to a lower-privilege role to maintain security hygiene. After these eight steps, Snowsight presents a straightforward view of your yearly Snowflake spend, ready for deeper analysis or budget review. ## Use Torii Skip the Snowflake console and open Torii [https://www.toriihq.com/], a SaaS management platform, to check annual Snowflake spending. The tool pulls data from every SaaS license your company owns and displays it in one dashboard. To see Snowflake’s annual cost through Torii, follow these steps: ### 1. Create a Torii account Reach out to the Torii team [https://www.toriihq.com/] for a free two-week proof of concept to get started. ### 2. Link your expense systems and contracts Once your tenant is live, connect your finance tools (Coupa, QuickBooks, and similar platforms) to Torii to sync transactions. You can also upload contracts directly; Torii’s AI scans the files, captures subscription costs, and updates them automatically. Here are more instructions for the Snowflake integration [https://support.toriihq.com/hc/en-us/articles/5728282966811]. ### 3. Look up Snowflake in Torii Use the dashboard’s search bar and enter “Snowflake” to locate the application. Open the Snowflake application page to see license counts, total spend, upcoming renewal dates, and other pertinent information. ### Or, chat with Eko Torii’s chat-based assistant, Eko [https://www.toriihq.com/eko], fetches Snowflake usage data on demand. Open the Eko icon in the lower-right corner of the dashboard, type your Snowflake request, and see the results stream back in the chat window. ## Use Snowflake's API Here you’ll run one API call that sums the credits you used over the last 12 months, then turn that number into dollars. ### 1. Get an OAuth access token You need a short-lived token before Snowflake lets you hit its SQL REST endpoint for any query. - In Snowflake, create (or reuse) an OAuth security integration: - Grab the clientid and clientsecret Snowflake returns. - Exchange them for an access token: Note the accesstoken in the JSON response. ### 2. Build the cost query The ACCOUNTUSAGE view called METERINGHISTORY tracks credits by hour, and one simple sum gives you the yearly total. Save that SQL string for the next call. ### 3. Call the SQL REST API You’ll send your query to Snowflake’s REST endpoint located at /api/v2/statements, which accepts JSON payloads. The response looks like: 12345.67 is the credits used over the last year. ### 4. Turn credits into dollars Multiply the credit count by the contract price you pay per credit to convert usage into spend. If your price is $2.50 per credit, the example above costs 12345.67 2.50 = $30,864.17. With a single token request and one POST call, you now know your yearly Snowflake spend. ## Torii for SaaS Management SaaS management grows more complex as subscriptions pile up across teams. Tell us what you need; Torii’s SaaS Management Platform lets you: - Uncover shadow IT: Continuous discovery spots unapproved or forgotten apps as soon as they appear. - Reduce spend: Retire idle licenses and combine overlapping tools before the next invoice hits. - Automate onboarding/offboarding: Workflow-driven handoffs remove repetitive IT tasks, saving hours and cutting mistakes. - Stay ahead of renewals: Timely alerts surface every contract deadline so nothing slips through. Torii offers an end-to-end SaaS management platform that unites every stakeholder. It gives Finance, IT, and Security teams a shared, reliable view of all subscriptions. Learn more by visiting Torii [https://www.toriihq.com].