Description
An aged Azure account matters for a reason specific to Azure: subscriptions lapse quietly, and a fresh one is far more likely to. An account with two to four years of unbroken billing behind it has demonstrated exactly the payment reliability that keeps a subscription alive — and it arrives with a written record proving it.
It is verified, the subscription is live, limits are raised, and Azure OpenAI is reachable rather than pending.
Why age helps on Azure specifically
Azure’s onboarding is opaque even for legitimate customers — subscriptions that activate while services do not, cards rejected without reason, AI access held behind approval. But the failure that catches people on a bought Azure account is the silent subscription lapse: billing fails, the subscription is disabled, and everything built on it goes with it.
An aged account with a long, unbroken payment record is the strongest hedge against that, and the provenance record shows you that record before you pay. Why age predicts survival generally is set out here.

What is included
- A written provenance record — opening date, billing months, suspension history — before you pay.
- Login credentials — dedicated email and strong password.
- A live, unbroken subscription with billing method verified.
- Azure OpenAI reachable — no separate approval crawl for AI Foundry and OpenAI models.
- Raised compute limits across regions.
- Never previously sold — first sale, single buyer.
- Lifetime replacement, no expiry.
Tiers and pricing

Free Tier — $35
An aged account on the free tier — for prototyping and confirming Azure fits.
$200 Credit — $59
A modest working balance for a short project.
Pay-As-You-Go — $99
Active PAYG subscription, billing live, limits raised. The tier for production.
$5,000 Credit — $599
Sustained AI or compute workloads. Expiry stated in the record.
$25,000 Credit — $1,999
Enterprise runway.
The provenance record
Every account on this page ships with a written record before you pay: the opening date, the length of billing history, the suspension record, the prior-ownership status, and the approved quota. You review it and decide with the facts in front of you — not after the money has moved. If we cannot verify an account’s history to our own standard, it does not ship, and you are not charged. Our full standard for what a record must contain is set out here.
When Azure is the wrong answer
If you are running a web app, an API and a database, Azure will do it competently and expensively. Aged Hetzner or DigitalOcean accounts will do the same for a fraction of the cost.
Delivery
Around forty minutes, verified by hand. If suspended or failed afterwards, message the desk for a free replacement, no expiry.
Why buy an aged account rather than a new one?
Azure is free to sign up for, so what you are actually buying is not access — it is history. A new subscription has no track record, which means it enjoys none of the goodwill that keeps an established account alive through a billing hiccup or an unusual month. It is also, statistically, far more likely to be the account that lapses at the worst possible moment.
An aged account inverts that. Years of unbroken billing tell Microsoft’s systems that this is a real, reliable customer, and the provenance record tells you the same thing before you commit a penny. For a hobby project with no deadline, signing up yourself is fine. For anything you would be upset to lose, the history is the point — and it cannot be bought new at any price.
The first hour: keep what you bought
An aged account gives you a strong starting position. What you do in the first fifteen minutes decides whether you keep it.
- Change the password immediately and store it in a password manager. The one you were sent has sat in an email inbox.
- Enable multi-factor authentication before you deploy anything.
- Create a working user rather than operating as root day to day.
- Log in from one place. Accessing a freshly-purchased account from several countries in a week is the pattern that undoes even a well-aged account — it is precisely how resold-credential suspensions happen, and you do not want to recreate it yourself.
- Check the billing settings so you know what payment method is attached and what happens if it lapses.
Why we sell each account once
The most common way a bought account dies has nothing to do with its age or its quota. It is a seller handing the same credentials to several buyers, who then log in from several countries, triggering an automatic suspension that takes all of them down at once. A five-year-old account shared four ways dies as fast as a new one.
So we sell each account exactly once, and the prior-ownership status is stated plainly in the provenance record. It is the least glamorous thing we do and the most important. If you take one habit from this page, let it be asking every seller you consider: has this been sold to anyone else?
Enquiries
Is Azure OpenAI genuinely enabled?
Reachable rather than pending. Specific model or region needs? Confirm with us before ordering.
How old is the account?
Typically 2–4 years; the exact opening date is in the record.
Has it been sold before?
No. Once, to you.
Ask for the record
You do not have to buy anything to see how we work. Name the platform and the age you are after, and we will show you a genuine provenance record — opening date, billing history and all — with no obligation. It is the fastest way to tell a real aged account from a marketing word, and we would rather you tested us than took our word for it. Write to the desk.
Related
Aged Google Cloud · Aged Oracle Cloud · aged AWS range · cloud accounts.
Disclaimer: OldAccs.com is an independent reseller and is not affiliated with, authorised by, or endorsed by Microsoft Corporation. All trademarks belong to their respective owners. An aged account improves your odds; it does not exempt you from the rules. You remain responsible for operating within the platform’s terms of service and for whatever you deploy.






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