IT Glossary · IT Operations

SLA (Service Level Agreement) — Uptime Percentages Explained

An SLA is a contractual commitment from an IT service provider guaranteeing minimum service quality — specifically uptime percentage and how fast they will fix problems. 99.9% uptime sounds good but allows 8.7 hours of downtime per year.

A Service Level Agreement (SLA) is a formal contract between a service provider (ISP, cloud vendor, software company) and a customer that defines the expected level of service. For internet and cloud services, the most important SLA metric is uptime percentage — the proportion of time the service is available. SLAs also define Mean Time to Repair (MTTR) — how quickly the provider must restore service after an outage — and may include financial penalties or credits if SLAs are not met. Understanding SLAs is essential for Indian businesses evaluating ISPs, cloud providers, and managed service providers.

Related terms: Uptime, MTTR, Internet Leased Line, Cloud Computing, Managed Services, MSP

Frequently Asked Questions

What does 99.9% uptime mean in hours per year?

99.9% uptime = 0.1% downtime. In a year (8,760 hours), 0.1% = 8.76 hours of allowed downtime. Monthly: 0.73 hours (44 minutes). This is why "three nines" is the enterprise standard — it limits annual downtime to less than 9 hours.

Do I get money back if my ISP misses their SLA in India?

SLA credits (usually proportional to downtime as a % of monthly billing) are available if you document and report the outage. However, these credits rarely cover actual business losses. For critical operations, redundant connections (dual ISP or 4G backup) are more valuable than SLA credits.

Choose the right SLA for your business — we help Indian businesses evaluate ISP and cloud SLAs properly.