qdrant-deployment-options
About
This skill helps developers choose the right Qdrant deployment option by comparing local mode, Docker, Qdrant Cloud, and Qdrant EDGE. It guides decisions based on needs like prototyping, production scaling, managed operations, or lowest latency. Use it when selecting between self-hosted and cloud deployments for a new project.
Quick Install
Claude Code
Recommendednpx skills add qdrant/skills -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/qdrant/skillsgit clone https://github.com/qdrant/skills.git ~/.claude/skills/qdrant-deployment-optionsCopy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill
Documentation
Which Qdrant Deployment Do I Need?
Start with what you need: managed ops or full control? Network latency acceptable or not? Production or prototyping? The answer narrows to one of four options.
Getting Started or Prototyping
Use when: building a prototype, running tests, CI/CD pipelines, or learning Qdrant.
- Use local mode (Python only): zero-dependency, in-memory or disk-persisted, no server needed Local mode
- Local mode data format is NOT compatible with server. Do not use for production or benchmarking.
- For a real server locally, use Docker Quick start
Going to Production (Self-Hosted)
Use when: you need full control over infrastructure, data residency, or custom configuration.
- Docker is the default deployment. Full Qdrant Open Source feature set, minimal setup. Quick start
- You own operations: upgrades, backups, scaling, monitoring
- Must set up distributed mode manually for multi-node clusters Distributed deployment
- Consider Hybrid Cloud if you want Qdrant Cloud management on your infrastructure Hybrid Cloud
Going to Production (Zero-Ops)
Use when: you want managed infrastructure with zero-downtime updates, automatic backups, and resharding without operating clusters yourself.
- Qdrant Cloud handles upgrades, scaling, backups, and monitoring Qdrant Cloud
- Supports multi-version upgrades automatically
- Provides features not available in self-hosted:
/sys_metrics, managed resharding, pre-configured alerts
Need Lowest Possible Latency
Use when: network round-trip to a server is unacceptable. Edge devices, in-process search, or latency-critical applications.
- Qdrant EDGE: in-process bindings to Qdrant shard-level functions, no network overhead Qdrant EDGE
- Same data format as server. Can sync with server via shard snapshots.
- Single-node feature set only. No distributed mode.
What NOT to Do
- Use local mode for production or benchmarking (not optimized, incompatible data format)
- Self-host without monitoring and backup strategy (you will lose data or miss outages)
- Choose EDGE when you need distributed search (single-node only)
- Pick Hybrid Cloud unless you have data residency requirements (unnecessary Kubernetes complexity when Qdrant Cloud works)
GitHub Repository
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