This issue tracks the 2026 retry updates for AWS Tools for PowerShell. See the announcement blog post for the full story across all AWS SDKs, including how to tell if you are affected.
Status
|
|
| Opt-in available in |
AWS.Tools.Common version 5.0.202 and later |
| Opt-in flag |
AWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026=true |
| Default rollout |
No sooner than November 2026 |
What changed
When you set AWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026=true, the retry defaults within standard mode update. The retry mode itself does not change.
If you have explicitly configured max attempts or backoff, your value takes precedence for that setting.
| Setting |
Before |
After |
| Transient (non-throttling) base delay |
1,000 ms |
50 ms |
| Throttling base delay |
1,000 ms |
1,000 ms (unchanged) |
| Max attempts |
3 |
3 (unchanged) |
| Transient retry quota cost |
5 tokens |
14 tokens |
| DynamoDB and DynamoDB Streams |
|
|
| Transient (non-throttling) base delay |
1,000 ms |
25 ms |
| Throttling base delay |
1,000 ms |
1,000 ms (unchanged) |
| Max attempts |
10 |
4 |
DynamoDB defaults use a shorter base delay to match its low-latency profile. The additional attempt keeps the last retry's maximum backoff comparable to the general default.
Transient errors (such as 500s and connection resets) now use a much shorter backoff than throttling errors (where the service asks you to slow down). For details on backoff timing, error classification, and the retry quota, see Retry behavior in the AWS SDKs. For retry mode selection and configuration options, see Retry behavior in the AWS SDKs.
How to opt in
Update to AWS.Tools.Common version 5.0.202 or later, then set the environment variable:
$env:AWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026 = "true"
Bash:
export AWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026=true
Windows CMD:
set AWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026=true
How to revert
During the opt-in period, remove the environment variable:
Remove-Item Env:AWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026
After the default rollout (no sooner than November 2026), the AWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026 flag will be removed. The updated behavior cannot be reverted because this SDK does not support legacy retry mode. You can still override max_attempts.
If this is a concern for your use case, please let us know in this issue.
Where you might notice a difference
For most workloads, the change is invisible or strictly better. Transient errors recover faster because the base delay is significantly shorter.
- Retry quota activates sooner for transient errors. Each transient retry costs 14 tokens (previously 5 for most errors). During sustained transient failures (such as 500s and connection resets), the retry quota triggers at a lower failure rate than the previous version of standard mode. Throttling retries cost 5 tokens.
- Long-polling operations now back off when the retry quota is depleted. Operations like
SQS.ReceiveMessage apply a backoff delay before returning an error, even when retries are blocked. Without this, polling loops tighten during outages, spiking client CPU usage and generating additional load that can delay recovery. For details, see long-polling operations.
Overriding specific settings
You do not have to accept all changes as a bundle. If you opt in but want to keep a specific previous value, set it explicitly. Precedence applies per setting.
For example, to use the new backoff timing but keep a higher DynamoDB max attempts:
$ddbConfig = New-Object -TypeName Amazon.DynamoDBv2.AmazonDynamoDBConfig
$ddbConfig.MaxErrorRetry = 9
Get-DDBTable -TableName <TABLE_NAME> -ClientConfig $ddbConfig
For the full list of configurable settings and their precedence, see Retry behavior in the AWS SDKs.
Feedback
If you encounter unexpected behavior or have questions, comment on this issue. Your feedback during the opt-in period directly shapes when and how we make this the default.
Status
AWS.Tools.Commonversion5.0.202and laterAWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026=trueWhat changed
When you set
AWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026=true, the retry defaults withinstandardmode update. The retry mode itself does not change.If you have explicitly configured max attempts or backoff, your value takes precedence for that setting.
Transient errors (such as 500s and connection resets) now use a much shorter backoff than throttling errors (where the service asks you to slow down). For details on backoff timing, error classification, and the retry quota, see Retry behavior in the AWS SDKs. For retry mode selection and configuration options, see Retry behavior in the AWS SDKs.
How to opt in
Update to
AWS.Tools.Commonversion5.0.202or later, then set the environment variable:Bash:
export AWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026=trueWindows CMD:
How to revert
During the opt-in period, remove the environment variable:
Remove-Item Env:AWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026After the default rollout (no sooner than November 2026), the
AWS_NEW_RETRIES_2026flag will be removed. The updated behavior cannot be reverted because this SDK does not supportlegacyretry mode. You can still overridemax_attempts.If this is a concern for your use case, please let us know in this issue.
Where you might notice a difference
For most workloads, the change is invisible or strictly better. Transient errors recover faster because the base delay is significantly shorter.
SQS.ReceiveMessageapply a backoff delay before returning an error, even when retries are blocked. Without this, polling loops tighten during outages, spiking client CPU usage and generating additional load that can delay recovery. For details, see long-polling operations.Overriding specific settings
You do not have to accept all changes as a bundle. If you opt in but want to keep a specific previous value, set it explicitly. Precedence applies per setting.
For example, to use the new backoff timing but keep a higher DynamoDB max attempts:
For the full list of configurable settings and their precedence, see Retry behavior in the AWS SDKs.
Feedback
If you encounter unexpected behavior or have questions, comment on this issue. Your feedback during the opt-in period directly shapes when and how we make this the default.