Withdrawing transfers
When you sign in to your organization's management account, you can withdraw a transfer at any time. The transfer continues until the end date.
Consolidated bills for charges accrued before the end date are managed and paid for by the bill-transfer account. After the transfer ends, all consolidated bills for charges accrued thereafter are managed and paid for by the organization's own management account (bill-source account).
Considerations
Withdrawal can be done by either account in a transfer
Either account involved in a transfer can withdraw the transfer at any time.
Withdrawal cannot be undone
If a transfer is withdrawn, the account that was managing and paying for another organization's consolidated bill must send a new invitation to that organization to start again.
Transfers end at the end of the month
If a transfer is withdrawn, the end date is 23:59:59 UTC on the last day of the month specified in the withdrawal. Note, this is 6:59 PM Eastern Standard Time on the evening before the last day of the month.
Withdraw a transfer
Terms and concepts
The following are terms and concepts used in the AWS Billing and Cost Management console:
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Inbound billing: Billing transfers that allow you to manage and pay for another organization’s consolidated bill.
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Outbound billing: Billing transfers that allow an account outside your organization to manage and pay your consolidated bill.
Minimum permissions
To withdraw a transfer, you must have the following permissions:
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organizations:ListInboundResponsibilityTransfers -
organizations:ListOutboundResponsibilityTransfers -
organizations:TerminateResponsibilityTransfer
To withdraw a transfer, complete the following steps.
Note
When a transfer is withdrawn, the bill transfer account continues to access billing transfer views associated with the withdrawn transfers. This allows auditing of historical cost and usage data.
When you withdraw from billing transfer as a bill source account, you receive
AWS invoices for charges that occur after the withdrawal. You view cost and usage
data as computed by AWS from the standard billable domain instead of rates set by
the bill transfer account. During this transition, you lose access to historical
data in Cost Explorer (data remains but becomes inaccessible). The transition also
marks your AWS Cost and Usage Report preferences as unhealthy. You must reconfigure
your AWS Cost and Usage Report preferences for your files to correctly show your billable cost and
usage data. For more information, see Controlling cost
management data access with Billing View and AWS Cost and Usage Report.