We applied to AWS Startups for Chattr, a Twitch-focused social network. Approval was quick; we received $1,000 in AWS credits, and Chattr is now on the AWS Startups Showcase. Here's how simple the process was, which could help other solo devs or small teams on AWS.
Before diving in, let me explain what Chattr is
Chattr is a social network designed specifically for the Twitch community. Unlike general social platforms, it lets you sign in directly with your Twitch account-no extra registration. You get a feed to post updates, share Twitch clips, use Twitch emotes for reactions, and receive immediate live stream alerts when someone you follow goes live. This uniquely connects streamers and their audiences outside of live streams, all in one place built for Twitch culture.
The stack is Laravel 13 + React (via Inertia.js v3), deployed on AWS using ECS Fargate, RDS PostgreSQL, CloudFront, S3, and Reverb for WebSockets. So AWS wasn't an afterthought - it's the entire infrastructure.
Before sharing more, it's helpful to clarify what AWS Activate is
AWS Activate is Amazon's programme for startups. Depending on the tier you qualify for, you can receive free AWS credits, technical support credits, and access to AWS business and training resources.
There are two main tiers:
- Activate Founders - the self-service tier, open to any early-stage startup. Gives you up to $1,000 in credits.
- Activate Portfolio - requires a referral from a recognised VC, accelerator, or incubator. Can give up to $100,000 in credits.
We applied through the Founders tier since Chattr is currently bootstrapped.
The Application Process
It's genuinely straightforward. Here's what's involved:
- Create an AWS account if you don't already have one (you almost certainly do if you're building on AWS)
- Head to aws.amazon.com/activate and click "Apply Now"
- Fill in your startup details - company name, website, what you're building, stage, and how you're using AWS.
- Provide an AWS Account ID where the credits should be applied.
- Submit - that's it
The form takes about 10-15 minutes. You don't need a pitch deck, investor backing, or a revenue figure. You need a product (or at least a convincing description of one), a website, and a real AWS account.
We received approval and the credits within a couple of business days. The $1,000 appears directly in your AWS billing as a credit - no voucher codes or hoops to jump through.
What the Credits Cover
AWS credits apply to almost all services. For us, they offset:
- ECS Fargate - running the app container and the worker container
- RDS PostgreSQL - the main database
- ElastiCache Redis - queue, cache, and session storage
- CloudFront - CDN for static assets
- S3 - media uploads (post images, voice recordings, videos)
- CloudWatch Logs - observability via Laravel Nightwatch
At our current scale, $1,000 covers several months of infrastructure. For a solo developer or small team in early traction, that's genuinely meaningful runway.
The Startup Showcase
Something I didn't expect was being listed on the AWS Startups Showcase. It's a public directory of startups in the Activate programme. You get a profile page with your company name, description, industry, stage, and a link to your product.
It's not going to drive thousands of users on its own, but it's a legitimate third-party listing that adds a small amount of credibility, and it costs nothing extra.
Tips If You're Applying
Be specific about how you use AWS. The application asks how you're using their services. Don't write "we use the cloud." List the actual services - ECS, RDS, S3, CloudFront, whatever you're using - and briefly explain why. It shows you're a real AWS customer and not just applying to collect free money.
Apply early. The credits expire, and the sooner you apply, the longer you have to use them. The Founders tier credits are currently valid for two years from activation, but check the current terms when you apply.
Your startup doesn't need to be incorporated. You can apply as an individual building a product. You'll need to represent that you're an early-stage startup, but there's no requirement for a legal entity.
The Founders tier is worth doing even if you don't think you'll qualify for Portfolio. Many developers skip AWS Activate because they assume it's for VC-backed companies. The Founders tier is explicitly for self-funded and early-stage builders.
So, is AWS Activate worth it for solo founders?
Yes, without hesitation. The application took less time than it took to write this post. If you're already running workloads on AWS and haven't applied, you're leaving money on the table.
If you want to see what Chattr looks like in production, give it a try - sign in with your Twitch account and you'll be up and running in about ten seconds.
Have questions about the AWS Activate application or building on AWS as a solo founder? Drop them in the comments.
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