AWS Unveils Enhanced Console Customization: Color-Code Accounts, Hide Regions and Services to Boost Productivity
Breaking News
Amazon Web Services (AWS) today announced major expansions to its User Experience Customization (UXC) capability, enabling administrators to color-code accounts and selectively hide unused regions and services in the AWS Management Console. The update, effective immediately, aims to reduce cognitive load and streamline navigation for teams managing multiple accounts or complex environments.

"This new level of customization helps customers focus on what matters most—their actual workloads—by eliminating visual clutter," said Maria Chen, AWS Product Manager for Console Experience. "By allowing teams to tag accounts with distinct colors and filter out irrelevant regions and services, we're making the console a more intuitive and efficient tool."
Key Features
- Account Color Coding: Administrators can assign a color (e.g., orange for dev, light blue for test, red for production) to quickly distinguish account purposes directly from the navigation bar.
- Region Visibility: Controls which AWS Regions appear in the region selector, hiding those not in use.
- Service Visibility: Lets admins display only relevant AWS services in the console navigation, reducing unnecessary scrolling and clicks.
To set an account color, users navigate to Account settings in the console. Region and service configuration is accessible via the gear icon and unified settings tab, where administrators can choose all or selected options.
"As a security architect, being able to hide unused regions immediately reduces the attack surface from a visibility standpoint," commented James Roth, IT Director at a financial firm. "Our developers now see only what they need—no more accidental clicks into unused services."

Background
In August 2025, AWS introduced the UXC framework to let administrators tailor console UIs, including account color assignment. Today's launch extends that framework with new controls for region and service visibility, consolidating all personalization under one Account Settings tab.
Importantly, these visibility settings only affect the console appearance. They do not restrict access via AWS CLI, SDKs, APIs, or Amazon Q Developer. Teams retain full programmatic access to all regions and services regardless of console settings.
What This Means
For large organizations managing hundreds of AWS accounts, the new customization reduces the mental overhead of switching between environments. Color coding provides instant visual cues, while region and service filtering cuts down navigation time. This can significantly improve developer velocity and reduce errors in multi-account setups.
"This is a pragmatic step toward a more personalized cloud management experience," said Roth. "It's not about restricting access—it's about simplifying the daily workflow." AWS expects the feature to be particularly beneficial for enterprises with strict compliance or governance requirements, where limiting visible options aligns with least-privilege principles.
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