There are plenty of hosting providers that will provide everything you mention plus the actual servers for a monthly fee without requiring you to buy anything.
Trying to be helpful and not pedantic: "On premises" or "on prem" are good choices here, while "premise" means something else (e.g. "The premise of moving off-premises is that we can pay a little more in order not to worry about stuff that isn't our company's primary business.")
This is not the first time I have seen this but it is actually quite commonly used / mistake. I wonder if 20 years from now the word premise would have a different meaning.
I agree but now the cost climbs. I am not saying AWS is cheap. Just that you need to look at all the services and components that support a server in a rack.
All included, still not even close. Not by a long shot. Renting bare metal from a major provider is going to be less than 20% the cost of aws and that's not even including the bandwidth which is even cheaper from bare metal vs aws.
There is no calculus that makes aws cheaper unless you need extreme variability or some of their managed services and even then, you can usually use those services in conjunction with your rented bare metals.
Trying to be helpful and not pedantic: "On premises" or "on prem" are good choices here, while "premise" means something else (e.g. "The premise of moving off-premises is that we can pay a little more in order not to worry about stuff that isn't our company's primary business.")