What VMware Licensing Changes Mean For You
Broadcom’s new model is driving up costs and reducing flexibility. Here’s how to protect your budget, compliance, and control.
The Short Version
Broadcom’s takeover of VMware has reshaped the entire licensing model.
Perpetual licenses are gone, costs have spiked, and small to mid-market organizations are footing the bill.
If your renewal is coming up, you’re likely facing:
- Up to 1,500% price increases
- Forced subscription bundles you might never use
- License minimums jumping from 16 → 72 cores
- Fewer partners, higher lock-in risk
- New compliance exposure if you miss renewal deadlines
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People Also Ask / Conversational FAQ
Why are VMware prices increasing?
A: Broadcom eliminated perpetual licenses and now requires larger minimums and bundled SKUs, raising costs for smaller environments.
How much more will VMware licensing cost in 2025?
A: Mid-market companies are seeing increases of up to 1,500 % depending on environment size and support level.
What alternatives exist to VMware?
Many organizations are moving to Hyper-V, KVM, or managed private cloud providers like Dynascale for predictable pricing and compliance.
Can I keep using my existing VMware license?
A: Existing perpetual licenses will still function, but renewals and upgrades are restricted, so planning ahead is key.