19

When I configure a NAT Gateway, I will have to select a subnet, hence to my understanding, one NAT Gateway for one Subnet which falls under one Availability Zones.

Then I saw the below statement

If you have resources in multiple Availability Zones and they share one NAT gateway, in the event that the NAT gateway's Availability Zone is down, resources in the other Availability Zones lose internet access, To create an Availability Zone-independent architecture, create a NAT gateway in each Availability Zone and configure your routing to ensure that resources use the NAT gateway in the same Availability Zone.

If I have multiple EC2 in different subnets, how do they share a single NAT Gateway? Did I understand wrongly? Below is the screenshot I see when I try to create a NAT Gateway

enter image description here

1 Answer 1

52

A NAT Gateway connects to a specific Subnet, and a Subnet is in a specific Availability Zone.

Amazon EC2 instances in private subnets can use a NAT Gateway as follows:

  • The NAT Gateway is launched in a public subnet in the same VPC
  • The Route Table for the private subnet(s) require an additional entry that directs all Internet-bound traffic (0.0.0.0/0) to the NAT Gateway

Depending upon your appetite for risk, you might configure things differently.

Case 1: One public subnet, one private subnet in same AZ

  • The NAT Gateway goes into the public subnet
  • The EC2 Instances go into the private subnet
  • The Route Table for the private subnet points to the NAT Gateway in the public subnet

Case 2: Two public subnets, two private subnets, one NAT Gateway

  • The NAT Gateway goes into one public subnet (Public-Subnet-A)
  • The EC2 instances are launched in private subnets across two AZs (Private-Subnet-A, Private-Subnet-B)
  • The Route Table for both of the private subnets point to the NAT Gateway

However, if there is a failure with Availability Zone A (rare, but can happen), then the NAT Gateway is not reachable from Private-Subnet-B. Thus, the system may be impacted even though it is running across two AZs.

Case 3: Two public subnets, two private subnets, two NAT Gateways

  • The NAT Gateway goes into both public subnets (Public-Subnet-A, Public-Subnet-B)
  • The EC2 instances are launched in private subnets across two AZs (Private-Subnet-A, Private-Subnet-B)
  • The Route Table Private-Subnet-A points to the NAT Gateway in Public-Subnet-A
  • The Route Table Private-Subnet-B points to the NAT Gateway in Public-Subnet-B

If one of the AZs were to fail, then the EC2 instances in the other private subnet will still be able to communicate with the Internet because they have their own NAT Gateway in the same AZ.

13
  • 2
    @Isaac yes but no: it is possible to share a single NAT Gateway across as many AZs you want (case 2, above, references 2 AZs), within a region and within a single VPC in that region, but you will pay for cross-zone data transport and you lose resiliency in the unlikely event of an outage impacting the AZ where the NAT-GW is provisioned... and the NAT Gateway is always located in a single AZ. Dec 30, 2019 at 11:06
  • 4
    Option 2 will also lead to cross AZ bandwidth charges. This may cost more than running 2 NAT Gateways in there respective AZs. aws.amazon.com/premiumsupport/knowledge-center/…
    – TehNrd
    Jun 27, 2020 at 16:59
  • 2
    @Mint Yes, Case 3 describes the need for two separate Route Tables -- one for each Private Subnet since they will point to their 'own' NAT Gateway. Feb 11, 2022 at 23:44
  • 1
    @JohnRotenstein Thank you! I was missing that simple logic. Another question, is there a reason why people associate the main route table as their private? Is there any security risk for doing the opposite?
    – Mint
    Feb 11, 2022 at 23:49
  • 2
    @Mint You can use the Main Route Table for any purpose (eg the opposite). It's probably a good 'default' to treat it as a Private route table so that any new subnets default to being private unless explicitly configured to be public -- this is safer from a Security standpoint. Feb 11, 2022 at 23:53

Your Answer

Reminder: Answers generated by Artificial Intelligence tools are not allowed on Stack Overflow. Learn more

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.