Azure Cost & Capacity
This skill covers the cost, capacity, and inventory side of the azure-mcp connector: the pricing, quota, subscription, and group namespaces. All four are read-only — they answer "what would this cost", "do we have headroom", and "what exists", never "provision this".
Tool names follow the Azure MCP Server's namespace convention (azmcp / azure_mcp prefixes, grouped under pricing, quota, subscription, group). Invoke them by capability.
Namespace surface
subscription — subscription inventory
Lists the Azure subscriptions the connected service principal can see, with their IDs, display names, and state (Enabled, Disabled, Warned). This is almost always the first call in any workflow — nearly every other namespace needs a subscription ID for scope.
group — resource-group inventory
Lists and inspects resource groups within a subscription: name, location, tags, and provisioning state. Use it to map the shape of an environment, find resources by tag, or pick the right scope for a pricing or quota question.
pricing — Azure retail pricing
Looks up Azure retail prices from the public Azure Retail Prices API — meter rates by service, SKU, region, and currency. This gives list pricing, not the customer's negotiated or EA/CSP pricing, and not actual billed consumption. Treat its output as an estimate baseline.
quota — quota & usage limits
Reports subscription quotas and current usage for a resource provider and region — e.g. vCPU quota for a VM family, public IP count, network interface count. Each entry shows the limit, current usage, and therefore the remaining headroom.
Workflow patterns
Pre-deployment quota check
Before someone scales a deployment or stands up new resources, confirm there is headroom:
subscription— resolve the target subscription ID.quota— pull quota and current usage for the relevant provider and region (e.g.Microsoft.ComputevCPUs ineastus).- Compare requested capacity against
limit - usage. If headroom is insufficient, report the exact shortfall and the region — a quota increase is a separate, write/support action outside this connector.
Catching this before deployment avoids a half-failed rollout when Azure rejects the request at limit.
Cost estimation
When asked "what would X cost":
subscription/group— establish scope and region (region materially changes price).pricing— look up the retail meter rate for each SKU involved (compute size, storage tier, bandwidth).- Multiply by expected quantity and runtime to produce an estimate.
- State the assumptions plainly — this is retail list pricing in a stated currency and region. Actual billing depends on the customer's agreement (EA/CSP/MCA discounts), reservations, and real consumption. Never present a retail estimate as the customer's actual or guaranteed cost.
For what a customer actually spent, that is consumption/billing data — the pricing namespace does not provide it. Cost-saving opportunities on existing spend come from Azure Advisor's Cost recommendations (see the observability skill).
Subscription & resource-group inventory
For an environment audit or onboarding discovery:
subscription— enumerate all visible subscriptions; flag anyDisabledorWarned.group— for each subscription, list resource groups with their locations and tags.- Cross-reference tags against the MSP's tagging standard — untagged or mistagged groups are governance findings worth surfacing.
Capacity headroom report
Run quota across the key providers (Microsoft.Compute, Microsoft.Network, Microsoft.Storage) for the regions a customer uses, and produce a headroom table. Quotas above ~80% usage are worth a proactive quota-increase request before they block growth.
Constraints & caveats
- Read-only. This skill estimates, checks, and inventories. It cannot raise a quota, create a subscription or resource group, or apply pricing changes. Quota increases go through an Azure support/quota request — out of scope for this connector.
- Retail vs. actual price.
pricingreturns public retail rates only. It is an estimation baseline, never the customer's billed amount. - Scope first. Resolve subscription (and often resource group) before pricing or quota calls — they are scoped operations.
- Visibility is RBAC-bounded.
subscriptiononly shows subscriptions where the service principal holds a role assignment. A "missing" subscription usually means a missing Reader assignment, not a deleted subscription.