Table of Contents
Executive Snapshot
This guide is intended for SMB IT decision-makers, technical managers, and MSP clients evaluating on-premises virtualization platforms. If you read nothing else, this page gives you a working starting point.
What Changed and Why You Should Care
- Broadcom acquired VMware in late 2023 and eliminated perpetual licenses, removed SMB-friendly product tiers, and imposed a 72-core minimum purchase requirement [1] CRN Broadcom VMware Ups Minimum Core Purchase 'Substantially,' Levies Late Renewal Penalties View source ↗ [2] Trilio VMware License Cost Changes: What You Need to Know View source ↗ [3] SoftwareSeni Broadcom VMware Pricing Changes – Understanding the Licensing Crisis Driving Migration View source ↗ [4] Cybelesoft Surviving the VMware Licensing Shift: How to Navigate the 72-Core Minimum View source ↗
- Reported SMB cost increases at renewal range from 150% to over 400%
- Organizations that relied on VMware Essentials no longer have a direct equivalent — they must re-evaluate
- The alternatives are strong and have matured significantly in the past two years
Quick Recommendations by Scenario
| Your Situation | Starting Point | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Windows-heavy, existing Windows Server licensing | Windows Server 2025 / Hyper-V | Lowest licensing friction |
| Lowest 3-year cost, mixed workloads | Proxmox VE | Best cost-to-feature ratio |
| Supported open-source bundle for up to 3 hosts | XCP-ng + Vates subscription | Strong SMB value, flat rate |
| Azure relationship + hybrid cloud goals | Azure Local | Cloud-consistent management |
| Staying on VMware (existing contract) | VMware VVF — plan exit now | Budget for major cost increase |
How to Use This Guide
- Skim: Start with the Executive Snapshot and the Side-by-Side Comparison table (Section 6).
- Decide: Use the Decision Framework in Section 7 to narrow your options.
- Validate: Read the platform sections relevant to your top candidates.
- Plan: Review Section 8 (Migration) before committing to a path.
This guide does not advocate for any specific vendor. Recommendations are based on environment fit, cost, and risk.
Executive Decision Flow
First Platform to Evaluate — Start here. This identifies your best starting point; full validation follows in the sections below.
Do you run mostly Windows VMs and already have Windows Server licensing?
YES → Start with: Windows Server 2025 / Hyper-V
Need HA? Add a 2–3 node cluster. Linux-heavy too? Also evaluate Proxmox.
NO → Continue below ↓
Are you optimizing primarily for lowest 3-year total cost of ownership?
YES → Start with: Proxmox VE
Want a bundled vendor support contract for up to 3 hosts? Also consider: XCP-ng + Vates (~$2,000/yr flat rate)
NO → Continue below ↓
Do you have an active Azure strategy (Arc, AVD, hybrid operations)?
YES → Evaluate: Azure Local
Especially if Azure Hybrid Benefit applies. If not, fall back to Hyper-V.
NO → Continue below ↓
Mid-market environment with budget for a fully integrated HCI platform?
YES → Evaluate: Nutanix AHV
Expect $30K–$100K+ entry cost for a 3-node cluster. Request a 3-year TCO comparison first.
NO → Proxmox VE or Hyper-V are the usual finalists. See the scenario table in the Decision Framework section.
Special Case: Must Stay on VMware?
If you must stay on VMware due to contracts or tooling dependencies:
→ Renew only as a short-term bridge. Plan your exit path now. Budget for continued cost increases.
Platform Positioning Map
Relative positioning based on operational complexity and infrastructure cost for typical 1–3 host SMB deployments.
Hyper-V
Windows-native, low cost
Proxmox VE
Full-featured, best TCO
XCP-ng / XO
Open-source, flat rate
Azure Local
Hybrid-focused
Nutanix AHV
HCI, high entry cost
VMware / Broadcom
High cost, specialized admin
Hyper-V
Windows-native, low cost
Proxmox VE
Full-featured, best TCO
XCP-ng / XO
Open-source, flat rate
Azure Local
Hybrid-focused
Nutanix AHV
HCI, high entry cost
VMware / Broadcom
High cost, specialized admin
Positioning reflects typical SMB production configurations. Individual environments may vary based on existing infrastructure, licensing, and administrative expertise.
The 2026 Virtualization Landscape
Why This Decision Matters More Than It Did in 2023
For years, VMware vSphere was the de facto choice for on-premises virtualization. It was widely understood, well-supported by MSPs, and predictably priced. That era ended in November 2023 when Broadcom completed its acquisition of VMware and rapidly restructured the entire product line, pricing model, and partner ecosystem.
What Changed Under Broadcom
- Perpetual licenses eliminated — all customers must subscribe annually
- Essentials and Essentials Plus kits (popular with SMBs) discontinued
- Product catalog reduced from ~168 SKUs to 4 main bundles [3] SoftwareSeni Broadcom VMware Pricing Changes – Understanding the Licensing Crisis Driving Migration View source ↗
- 72-core minimum purchase per product/order line (effective April 2025) [1] CRN Broadcom VMware Ups Minimum Core Purchase 'Substantially,' Levies Late Renewal Penalties View source ↗ [2] Trilio VMware License Cost Changes: What You Need to Know View source ↗ [3] SoftwareSeni Broadcom VMware Pricing Changes – Understanding the Licensing Crisis Driving Migration View source ↗ [4] Cybelesoft Surviving the VMware Licensing Shift: How to Navigate the 72-Core Minimum View source ↗
- SMBs reporting cost increases of 150–450% at renewal [3] SoftwareSeni Broadcom VMware Pricing Changes – Understanding the Licensing Crisis Driving Migration View source ↗
- Partner ecosystem dramatically reduced — many MSPs lost reseller status
- 20% late renewal penalty now enforced [1] CRN Broadcom VMware Ups Minimum Core Purchase 'Substantially,' Levies Late Renewal Penalties View source ↗ [2] Trilio VMware License Cost Changes: What You Need to Know View source ↗ [5] Sangfor VMware Licensing 2026: New Pricing, Subscriptions & Top Alternatives View source ↗
- vSphere 7 reached end-of-support in October 2025 [6] VMware / Broadcom Community End of vSphere 7.0 Cycle and New Subscription Model View source ↗
Organizations are no longer asking "should we look at alternatives?" They are asking "which alternative is right for us?"
What to Look for in a Virtualization Platform (SMB Lens)
- Total cost of ownership (TCO) over 3 years, not just sticker price
- Windows Server VM support quality — most SMB workloads are Windows-centric
- Linux VM support — even Windows shops often run Linux for specific services
- Management interface usability and learning curve
- High availability (HA) and live migration capabilities
- Backup and disaster recovery integration
- Community and vendor support quality
- Vendor stability and long-term pricing predictability
When Virtualization May Not Be Ideal
Virtualization is appropriate for most server workloads. However, some environments benefit from running on dedicated physical hardware instead.
Extremely latency-sensitive workloads, GPU-intensive compute tasks, or specialized hardware appliances may perform better bare-metal. [12] Mirantis Top 13 Benefits of Virtualization for Enterprises View source ↗ If your environment includes any of these workloads, discuss them with your infrastructure team before consolidating.
Platform-by-Platform Analysis
Note on hypervisor types: Type 1 hypervisors run directly on the physical hardware (bare metal). Type 2 hypervisors run on top of an operating system. [12] Mirantis Top 13 Benefits of Virtualization for Enterprises View source ↗ All platforms in this guide are Type 1.
VMware / Broadcom (vSphere Foundation)
Vendor
Broadcom, Inc.
License Model
Subscription-only, per physical core
Hypervisor
ESXi (Type 1)
VMware vSphere remains the most widely recognized virtualization platform in the world and continues to offer an enterprise-grade, highly mature feature set. However, the commercial terms have fundamentally changed since Broadcom's acquisition, creating serious challenges for SMB organizations.
Pricing in 2026
- vSphere Standard: approximately $50 per core per year [2] Trilio VMware License Cost Changes: What You Need to Know View source ↗
- vSphere Foundation (VVF): approximately $190 per core per year [2] Trilio VMware License Cost Changes: What You Need to Know View source ↗
- VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF): enterprise tier, highest cost
- Minimum license purchase: 72 cores per product/order line (as of April 2025) [1] CRN Broadcom VMware Ups Minimum Core Purchase 'Substantially,' Levies Late Renewal Penalties View source ↗ [2] Trilio VMware License Cost Changes: What You Need to Know View source ↗ [4] Cybelesoft Surviving the VMware Licensing Shift: How to Navigate the 72-Core Minimum View source ↗
- 16-core minimum per CPU socket still applies [4] Cybelesoft Surviving the VMware Licensing Shift: How to Navigate the 72-Core Minimum View source ↗
- 20% surcharge for late renewals [1] CRN Broadcom VMware Ups Minimum Core Purchase 'Substantially,' Levies Late Renewal Penalties View source ↗ [2] Trilio VMware License Cost Changes: What You Need to Know View source ↗ [5] Sangfor VMware Licensing 2026: New Pricing, Subscriptions & Top Alternatives View source ↗
- Illustrative cost: 1 host, 1× 16-core CPU → billed at 72-core minimum → ~$13,680/year for VVF [2] Trilio VMware License Cost Changes: What You Need to Know View source ↗
Strengths
- Mature, battle-tested platform with the largest third-party ecosystem
- Excellent Windows and Linux VM support
- vCenter provides a feature-rich management console
- Familiar to most experienced virtualization administrators
Weaknesses
- Pricing is structurally hostile to SMBs — 72-core minimums penalize small deployments
- No perpetual license option — environment becomes unmanageable if subscription lapses
- Bundled features (NSX, vSAN, Aria) increase cost for organizations that do not need them
- Partner ecosystem contraction limits reseller and support options
Reality Check: VMware in 2026
- VMware is rarely recommended for new SMB deployments unless existing tooling, licensing agreements, or deep staff expertise make migration cost-prohibitive.
- If your renewal is 60+ days away: begin evaluating migration options now.
- If you must renew: treat it as buying time to plan your exit, not a long-term commitment.
Proxmox Virtual Environment (Proxmox VE)
Vendor
Proxmox Server Solutions GmbH (Austria)
License Model
Open-source (AGPLv3) + optional paid support
Hypervisor
KVM + LXC containers
Proxmox VE is an open-source, enterprise-grade virtualization platform that has seen rapid adoption growth since 2024, driven largely by VMware migrations. It supports full virtual machines via KVM and lightweight Linux containers via LXC from a single web-based management interface. Every feature — including high availability, live migration, clustering, ZFS replication, Ceph storage, and backup — is available regardless of subscription tier. [7] Proxmox Pricing for Subscription Plans – Proxmox Virtual Environment View source ↗
Support Model
Most production deployments pair Proxmox with either a vendor support subscription or an MSP support contract. Subscriptions provide access to the stable enterprise repository and vendor-backed ticket support.
Pricing in 2026
Subscriptions are per physical CPU socket, per year. [7] Proxmox Pricing for Subscription Plans – Proxmox Virtual Environment View source ↗
| Tier | Price | Support | Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | Community forums only | Full feature set |
| Community | ~$125/socket/yr | Community forums + enterprise repo | Full feature set |
| Basic | ~$385/socket/yr | 3 tickets/yr, 1-business-day response | Full feature set |
| Standard | ~$575/socket/yr | 10 tickets/yr, 4-hour response | Full feature set |
| Premium | ~$1,150/socket/yr [7] Proxmox Pricing for Subscription Plans – Proxmox Virtual Environment View source ↗ [8] MiniServer.store Proxmox VE Community – Yearly Subscription View source ↗ | Unlimited, 2-hour response 24×5 | Full feature set |
Example: 3-host cluster, 2 sockets each, Basic tier = 6 sockets × ~$385 ≈ $2,310/year, covering all three hosts with support tickets and enterprise repository access.
Windows VM Support
Proxmox runs Windows Server VMs via KVM with full hardware virtualization. Windows Server 2019, 2022, and 2025 are all supported. VirtIO drivers are recommended and well-documented. The platform is production-proven for Active Directory, file servers, SQL Server, and line-of-business applications. VMDK import from VMware is supported natively.
Notable Technical Capabilities
- ZFS: enterprise-grade storage with compression, snapshots, and replication
- Ceph: distributed storage across cluster nodes — eliminates external SAN/NAS dependency
- Proxmox Backup Server (PBS): purpose-built, deduplicated backup appliance — free and open-source [7] Proxmox Pricing for Subscription Plans – Proxmox Virtual Environment View source ↗
- LXC containers: run lightweight Linux workloads alongside full VMs on the same host
Strengths
- No hypervisor or feature licensing cost
- Full HA, live migration, and clustering at all tiers
- PBS can replace third-party backup tools for many SMBs
- Web UI is intuitive and well-regarded
- VMDK import makes VMware migrations straightforward
- Vendor pricing has remained stable and predictable [7] Proxmox Pricing for Subscription Plans – Proxmox Virtual Environment View source ↗
Weaknesses
- Administration benefits from Linux familiarity
- No native SCVMM or System Center integration
DP3 Perspective on Proxmox VE
- One of the strongest SMB platforms in 2026 for mixed Windows/Linux environments.
- Ideal for VMware migrations: VMDK import is supported and the management paradigm is familiar.
- Recommend Basic or Standard subscription tier for production environments.
- For Windows-only shops with existing Windows Server licensing, evaluate Hyper-V first.
XCP-ng and Xen Orchestra
Vendor
Vates SAS (France)
License Model
Open-source + optional Vates VMS subscription
Hypervisor
Xen (Type 1)
XCP-ng is a fully open-source, community-driven hypervisor built on the Xen project, created in 2018 after Citrix removed features from the free tier of XenServer. [9] Stromasys Cloud Virtualization vs. On-Premises: 2025 Comparison Guide View source ↗ Xen Orchestra (XO) is the web-based management and backup interface. XCP-ng's architecture is similar in design philosophy to VMware — dedicated management appliance, pool-based clustering, shared storage model — which can ease the transition for VMware admins.
Pricing in 2026
- XCP-ng hypervisor: open-source and free
- Xen Orchestra (XO): self-compilable from source for free
- Vates VMS — Essential: ~$2,000/year for up to 3 hosts (XCP-ng + XO + support) [9] Stromasys Cloud Virtualization vs. On-Premises: 2025 Comparison Guide View source ↗
- Vates VMS — Essential+: ~$4,000/year for up to 3 hosts (higher support tier) [9] Stromasys Cloud Virtualization vs. On-Premises: 2025 Comparison Guide View source ↗
Strengths
- Compelling price: ~$2,000/year covers a 3-host cluster with support
- Agentless backup simplifies management
- Strong VMware migration path via XO import workflows [9] Stromasys Cloud Virtualization vs. On-Premises: 2025 Comparison Guide View source ↗
- Vates support team has a strong reputation
Weaknesses
- Smaller ecosystem footprint compared to Proxmox
- Self-hosting XO from source requires meaningful Linux expertise
- Xen concepts are less familiar to Windows-focused administrators
DP3 Perspective on XCP-ng / Xen Orchestra
- Strong choice for SMBs that want a supported open-source stack at a flat annual rate.
- The Vates Essential plan at ~$2,000/year for up to 3 hosts is a highly competitive value.
- Best for organizations comfortable with Linux administration and a VMware-like architecture.
Windows Server 2025 / Hyper-V
Vendor
Microsoft Corporation
License Model
Perpetual (core-based) + optional SA
Hypervisor
Hyper-V (Type 1, built into Windows Server)
Hyper-V is Microsoft's native Type 1 hypervisor, included at no additional cost as a Windows Server role. [10] Microsoft Azure Stack HCI (Azure Local) Overview and Pricing View source ↗ For organizations deeply invested in the Microsoft ecosystem — Active Directory, Entra ID, Microsoft 365, SCCM — it offers the tightest integration and lowest administrative overhead. Perpetual licensing is still available, unlike VMware.
Important: Microsoft discontinued the free standalone Hyper-V Server edition with Windows Server 2025. [10] Microsoft Azure Stack HCI (Azure Local) Overview and Pricing View source ↗ Production use now requires a licensed copy of Windows Server 2025 Standard or Datacenter.
Pricing in 2026
- Windows Server 2025 Standard: ~$1,176 MSRP per 16-core license pack
- Windows Server 2025 Datacenter: ~$6,771 MSRP per 16-core license pack [11] S-PRO Cloud vs On-Premise Cost Comparison — 2024 Update View source ↗
- Standard Edition: rights for 2 Windows Server VMs per licensed host; stack for more
- Datacenter Edition: unlimited Windows Server VMs on the licensed host [11] S-PRO Cloud vs On-Premise Cost Comparison — 2024 Update View source ↗
- Linux VMs: no additional OS licensing required on either edition [11] S-PRO Cloud vs On-Premise Cost Comparison — 2024 Update View source ↗
- Perpetual licenses still available — no forced subscription
Licensing Guidance: For a host running 4+ Windows Server VMs, Datacenter edition is typically more cost-effective than stacking Standard licenses. Always calculate the stacking cost before assuming Standard is cheaper.
Management Options
- Hyper-V Manager: built-in, basic, single-host UI
- Windows Admin Center (WAC): free, modern browser-based UI — recommended for SMBs
- Failover Cluster Manager: for HA configurations
- System Center VMM: enterprise-grade, additional licensing required
Strengths
- No additional hypervisor licensing — included with Windows Server
- Perpetual licensing still available
- Native integration with Active Directory, Azure, and Microsoft tooling
- Windows Admin Center is free and purpose-built for SMB management
- Supported by all major backup platforms
Weaknesses
- Linux VM support is functional but less optimized than KVM-based platforms
- Free standalone Hyper-V Server edition discontinued in Server 2025
- Advanced features (S2D, Shielded VMs) require Datacenter edition
DP3 Perspective on Hyper-V
- Excellent choice for predominantly Windows environments with existing Windows Server licensing.
- Use Windows Admin Center (free) for management — modern and purpose-built for SMB.
- For 3+ Windows VMs per host: calculate Datacenter vs. Standard stacking cost before purchasing.
Azure Local (formerly Azure Stack HCI)
Vendor
Microsoft Corporation
License Model
Subscription, per core per month via Azure
Hypervisor
Hyper-V + S2D + Azure Arc
Azure Local runs Hyper-V workloads on-premises while being managed and billed through Azure. Clusters scale from 1 to 16 nodes and support Windows/Linux VMs, AKS containers, and Azure Virtual Desktop. It requires an Azure subscription to register, activate, and manage the cluster — it is not a standalone on-premises product. [10] Microsoft Azure Stack HCI (Azure Local) Overview and Pricing View source ↗
Reality Check: Azure Local in SMB Environments
- Azure Local is less common in sub-50 VM environments and is more typical in organizations already running significant Azure workloads.
- If your organization has no Azure relationship or hybrid cloud goals, Proxmox or Hyper-V are more straightforward choices.
- Azure Local shines when you want on-premises data residency combined with cloud-consistent management and billing.
Pricing in 2026
- Base platform: $10.00 per physical core per month (Windows guest licensing not included) [10] Microsoft Azure Stack HCI (Azure Local) Overview and Pricing View source ↗
- With unlimited Windows Server guest rights: $23.30 per physical core per month [10] Microsoft Azure Stack HCI (Azure Local) Overview and Pricing View source ↗
- Azure Hybrid Benefit: active Windows Server + SA may reduce or waive host fees [10] Microsoft Azure Stack HCI (Azure Local) Overview and Pricing View source ↗
- 60-day free trial upon registration [10] Microsoft Azure Stack HCI (Azure Local) Overview and Pricing View source ↗
- Illustrative cost: 1 host, 16 cores, $23.30/core = ~$4,474/year covering unlimited Windows VMs
Strengths
- Tightest Azure integration — managed from the Azure portal via Arc
- Validated hardware catalog (Dell, HPE, Lenovo)
- AKS on-premises at no extra charge
- Consistent security posture with Azure
Weaknesses
- Requires internet connectivity to Azure for management and billing
- Monthly OpEx accumulates vs. a one-time perpetual license
- Validated hardware requirement limits procurement flexibility
DP3 Perspective on Azure Local
- Best for organizations with an existing Azure relationship and hybrid cloud strategy.
- Evaluate whether Azure Hybrid Benefit applies — it can dramatically reduce total cost.
- Not recommended as a starting point for organizations with no current Azure investment.
Nutanix AHV (Nutanix Cloud Infrastructure)
Vendor
Nutanix, Inc.
License Model
Node-based, quote-required; AHV included
Hypervisor
AHV (KVM-based, included with platform)
Nutanix is a leading hyperconverged infrastructure platform bundling compute, storage, and networking into a single integrated stack. [9] Stromasys Cloud Virtualization vs. On-Premises: 2025 Comparison Guide View source ↗ AHV is included at no additional licensing cost. Nutanix is not a standalone hypervisor deployed on commodity hardware — it is an HCI platform requiring Nutanix-validated nodes.
Pricing in 2026
- AHV hypervisor: included at no additional cost within AOS/NCI [9] Stromasys Cloud Virtualization vs. On-Premises: 2025 Comparison Guide View source ↗
- Licensing tiers: Starter, Pro, and Ultimate, priced per node
- Minimum viable production cluster: typically 3 nodes for HA
- Entry costs for small clusters commonly reach tens of thousands of dollars — $30,000–$100,000+ range including hardware and licensing [9] Stromasys Cloud Virtualization vs. On-Premises: 2025 Comparison Guide View source ↗
Strengths
- AHV hypervisor included — no separate licensing fees
- Best-in-class HCI: converged compute and storage on each node
- Prism management UI is widely praised for simplicity
- Nutanix Move tool provides streamlined VMware migration
Weaknesses
- High entry cost — not well-suited for 1–2 host SMB deployments
- Requires Nutanix-validated hardware — no commodity server flexibility
- Pricing opacity requires vendor engagement
DP3 Perspective on Nutanix AHV
- Best fit for mid-market organizations (3+ nodes, 20+ VMs) with budget for an integrated HCI solution.
- Not recommended as a starting point for 1–2 host SMB environments.
- If Nutanix is on your shortlist: request a 3-year TCO comparison vs. Proxmox or Hyper-V before committing.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Platform | License Model | Approx. Cost | Win VMs | Linux VMs | SMB Fit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VMware / Broadcom | Sub per core | ~$13,680+/yr/host | Excellent | Good | Poor |
| Proxmox VE | OSS + optional sub | $0–$1,150/socket/yr | Excellent | Excellent | Excellent |
| XCP-ng / XO | OSS + Vates sub | Free–$2K/yr (3 hosts) | Good | Excellent | Very Good |
| Hyper-V / WS 2025 | Perpetual core-based | $1,176–$6,771 (16-core) | Excellent | Good | Very Good |
| Azure Local | Sub /core/month | $10–$23.30/core/mo | Excellent | Good | Good (hybrid) |
| Nutanix AHV | Node-based, quote req. | $30K–$100K+ (3-node) | Excellent | Excellent | Mid-Market+ |
All pricing is approximate and should be verified directly with vendors before budgeting.
Backup Ecosystem
Backup vendor support often influences platform selection. Confirm compatibility with your existing solution before committing to a platform. [13] Citrix Application Virtualization vs. Desktop Virtualization View source ↗
| Backup Platform | VMware | Proxmox VE | Hyper-V | XCP-ng |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Veeam | Yes | Yes (agent-based) | Yes | Limited |
| Datto | Yes | Varies | Yes | Limited |
| Acronis | Yes | Yes | Yes | Limited |
| Proxmox Backup Server | No | Native (deduplicated) | No | No |
| Xen Orchestra Backup | No | No | No | Native (agentless) |
Storage Architecture
| Platform | Typical Storage Approach |
|---|---|
| VMware / Broadcom | vSAN (HCI) or external shared storage (NFS, iSCSI) |
| Proxmox VE | ZFS (local/replicated), Ceph (distributed), NFS/iSCSI |
| Hyper-V / WS 2025 | Storage Spaces Direct (Datacenter), SMB 3.0, SAN/NAS |
| XCP-ng / XO | Storage Repositories (local, NFS, iSCSI, FC, Ceph) |
| Azure Local | Storage Spaces Direct (required), NVMe-optimized |
| Nutanix AHV | Distributed Storage Fabric (DSF) — built into each node |
[9] Stromasys Cloud Virtualization vs. On-Premises: 2025 Comparison Guide View source ↗ [10] Microsoft Azure Stack HCI (Azure Local) Overview and Pricing View source ↗ [12] Mirantis Top 13 Benefits of Virtualization for Enterprises View source ↗
Hardware Compatibility
- Always validate hardware compatibility before selecting a platform.
- VMware historically maintained the strictest Hardware Compatibility List (HCL).
- Proxmox and XCP-ng support a broader range of commodity server hardware.
- Azure Local and Nutanix require hardware from specific validated vendor catalogs.
- For existing hardware: verify NIC, RAID controller, and storage driver support on the target platform before committing.
Decision Framework
How to Choose
Step 1: Define Your Workload Profile
- How many VMs will run, and what operating systems?
- What is the ratio of Windows VMs to Linux VMs?
- Are any workloads latency-sensitive or require specific hardware (GPU, RDMA)?
Step 2: Establish Your Budget Model
- Can the organization support ongoing annual subscription costs (OpEx)?
- Is there a preference for a one-time perpetual purchase (CapEx)?
- What is the 3-year TCO ceiling for virtualization licensing alone?
Step 3: Assess Administrative Capabilities
- Is the IT administrator primarily Windows-trained or Linux-comfortable?
- Is there an MSP managing the environment who can support the target platform?
- What is the tolerance for a learning curve during and after migration?
Step 4: Evaluate Cloud and Hybrid Requirements
- Is there an existing Azure subscription and relationship?
- Is cloud bursting, DR to cloud, or Azure Arc management a near-term goal?
- Are there regulatory requirements that mandate on-premises data residency?
Scenario-Based Recommendations
| Scenario | Primary | Backup Option | Cost | Migration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Windows-centric, existing MS licensing | Hyper-V | Proxmox VE | Low | Low |
| Budget-constrained, mixed Windows/Linux | Proxmox VE | XCP-ng / XO | Very Low | Low |
| VMware refugee seeking feature parity | Proxmox VE | XCP-ng / XO | Low–Moderate | Moderate |
| Active Azure relationship, hybrid goals | Azure Local | Hyper-V | Moderate | Moderate |
| Mid-market, growth-focused, full HCI | Nutanix AHV | Proxmox VE | High | Low |
| Must stay VMware (existing contract) | VMware VVF (renew only) | Migrate ASAP | Very High | Very High |
Common SMB Virtualization Architectures
Architecture A: Single Host with DR Replication
- 1 primary host running all production VMs
- Backup appliance or NAS on the same network
- Offsite or cloud backup copy for disaster recovery
- Restore-based DR: recovery measured in hours, not minutes
- Best for lower HA requirements and limited hardware budget
Architecture B: 3-Node HA Cluster
- 3 nodes providing quorum, eliminating single points of failure
- Shared or hyperconverged storage (Ceph, S2D, Nutanix DSF)
- HA and live migration enabled — VM failover on host failure
- Scheduled backup with tested restore procedures
- Best where downtime cost justifies redundant hardware
Reality Check: Licensing Math Can Flip the Decision
- On a host with 6+ Windows Server VMs: Windows Server Datacenter is often cheaper than Standard with stacking.
- On a mixed Windows/Linux host: open-source hypervisors may have lower TCO than Hyper-V.
- Always model the 3-year cost of hypervisor plus guest OS licensing combined before deciding.
Try the Cost Comparison Calculator
Want to see how these platforms compare for your specific environment? Our interactive calculator lets you enter your host count, core count, and licensing details to get a side-by-side 3-year cost breakdown.
Open CalculatorMigration Considerations
How Difficult Is Migration in Practice?
For most SMB environments (1–3 hosts, fewer than 50 VMs), migration from VMware to an alternative hypervisor is typically straightforward and low-risk when properly planned. The migration project is usually measured in days, not months. [9] Stromasys Cloud Virtualization vs. On-Premises: 2025 Comparison Guide View source ↗ [12] Mirantis Top 13 Benefits of Virtualization for Enterprises View source ↗
Highly customized VMware environments — those using NSX networking, complex vSAN clusters, or deep VMware tooling integration — may require additional planning.
Typical Migration Timelines
| Environment Size | Typical Migration Window |
|---|---|
| 5–10 VMs | 1 day |
| 10–25 VMs | 1–3 days |
| 25–50 VMs | 3–7 days |
Estimates assume non-clustered source environments, standard workloads, and an MSP or experienced administrator managing the process.
Common Migration Approaches
- Cold migration: VM powered down, disk converted (VMDK → QCOW2 or VHDX), VM imported and restarted on target platform
- Replication-based: Veeam or StarWind V2V to replicate running VMs with minimal downtime
- Tool-assisted: Nutanix Move, Xen Orchestra import workflows, or Proxmox native VMDK import [9] Stromasys Cloud Virtualization vs. On-Premises: 2025 Comparison Guide View source ↗ [12] Mirantis Top 13 Benefits of Virtualization for Enterprises View source ↗ [2] Trilio VMware License Cost Changes: What You Need to Know View source ↗
VM Format Compatibility
- Proxmox VE: VMDK import supported natively via web UI or CLI
- XCP-ng / XO: dedicated import workflow in XO; supports OVF and VMDK
- Hyper-V: Microsoft Disk2vhd for basic conversion; Veeam and StarWind provide more robust paths
- Nutanix: Nutanix Move provides cross-hypervisor migration with minimal downtime
Key Migration Steps
- Inventory all VMs: OS version, disk count, RAM, CPU, network adapters, installed applications
- Validate hardware compatibility with the target hypervisor before committing
- Install and configure target platform in parallel before any production cutover
- Migrate non-critical VMs first; validate backups and performance before touching production
- Update guest tools on all migrated VMs (VirtIO drivers, Hyper-V Integration Services, XenServer Tools)
- Validate backup jobs on the new platform before decommissioning old infrastructure
DP3 Migration Support
DP3 supports full platform assessments, migration planning, and execution. We handle migrations to Proxmox VE, Windows Server/Hyper-V, and Azure Local for SMB environments.
We offer a 60-minute virtualization fit review: workload profile, licensing math, and migration path.
Common Questions from SMB Organizations
"Will my backups still work?"
Confirm that your backup solution supports your target platform before committing. See the Backup Ecosystem table in the Side-by-Side Comparison section.
For SMB environments, Proxmox Backup Server (PBS) and Xen Orchestra's agentless built-in backup can sometimes replace third-party backup software entirely.
"Will performance be worse if we leave VMware?"
In typical SMB workloads, hypervisor performance differences are very small:
- CPU virtualization overhead across all modern hypervisors: typically 1–5% [12] Mirantis Top 13 Benefits of Virtualization for Enterprises View source ↗
- Disk performance depends primarily on storage architecture, not hypervisor
- Network performance depends primarily on NIC and switching design [12] Mirantis Top 13 Benefits of Virtualization for Enterprises View source ↗
For Active Directory, file servers, SQL Server, web services, and line-of-business applications, organizations typically observe no measurable performance difference between platforms.
Reality Check: Hardware Matters More Than Hypervisor for Performance
RAID controller type, drive technology (NVMe vs. SAS vs. SATA), and NIC quality have far greater impact on real-world VM performance than hypervisor selection.
Benchmark your storage and network before and after migration to validate expectations.
"What skills does my IT team need?"
| Platform | Admin Skill Profile |
|---|---|
| VMware / Broadcom | Traditional virtualization admins; vSphere-trained |
| Proxmox VE | Linux-comfortable admins; web UI reduces CLI dependency |
| Hyper-V / WS 2025 | Windows Server admins; easiest for Windows-centric teams |
| XCP-ng / XO | Linux or virtualization specialists; Xen-specific concepts |
| Azure Local | Windows + Azure admins; Azure portal familiarity required |
| Nutanix AHV | Prism UI is admin-friendly; less platform-specific training needed |
Organizations working with an MSP can often adopt a new platform without significant internal retraining. The MSP manages the infrastructure layer while internal staff interact with familiar Windows VMs and applications.
"What happens if the platform vendor changes pricing later?"
| Platform | Pricing Risk Profile |
|---|---|
| VMware (Broadcom) | High |
| Proxmox VE | Low |
| XCP-ng / XO | Low–Moderate |
| Hyper-V / WS 2025 | Low |
| Azure Local | Moderate |
| Nutanix AHV | Moderate |
Open-source platforms such as Proxmox and XCP-ng offer meaningful protection against vendor lock-in: the hypervisor itself remains freely available even if support subscription pricing changes.
"How do we handle storage architecture?"
See the Storage Architecture table in the Side-by-Side Comparison section. The key question is whether your environment will use external shared storage (NAS/SAN) or hyperconverged storage built into the cluster nodes. Validate your intended storage architecture against the target platform before committing.
Summary and Closing Thoughts
The virtualization market in 2026 is more competitive and more consequential than it has been in decades. Broadcom's restructuring of VMware has forced virtually every SMB with a virtualized environment to re-examine its platform choices — and in many cases, that re-examination is leading to migration. [2] Trilio VMware License Cost Changes: What You Need to Know View source ↗ [3] SoftwareSeni Broadcom VMware Pricing Changes – Understanding the Licensing Crisis Driving Migration View source ↗
The good news is that the alternatives are strong. Proxmox VE has matured into an enterprise-capable platform with a compelling cost model for mixed-workload SMBs. Windows Server / Hyper-V remains the natural fit for Windows-centric organizations with existing Microsoft licensing. XCP-ng with Xen Orchestra offers a supported open-source stack at a flat annual rate. And for organizations with hybrid cloud ambitions, Azure Local provides a cloud-connected path that leverages existing Microsoft investments.
The question is no longer whether to reconsider VMware. The question is which alternative best aligns with your environment, your team, and your budget — and how to execute the migration with minimal disruption.
Reality Check Recap
- Hardware matters more than hypervisor for performance — don't over-optimize on platform choice while underinvesting in storage.
- Backup compatibility should be confirmed before committing to a platform.
- Licensing math can flip the best option depending on Windows VM count.
- Migration is usually days, not months — but highly customized VMware environments can change that.
- Open-source reduces lock-in but still requires a support strategy and patch discipline.
- Some workloads (GPU-intensive, ultra-low-latency) may still benefit from bare-metal deployment.
Ready to Evaluate Your Options?
DP3 offers a 60-minute virtualization fit review — workload profile, licensing math, and a migration path, at no cost.
References
- [1] CRN, "Broadcom VMware Ups Minimum Core Purchase 'Substantially,' Levies Late Renewal Penalties," 2025. Link
- [2] Trilio, "VMware License Cost Changes: What You Need to Know," 2026. Link
- [3] SoftwareSeni, "Broadcom VMware Pricing Changes – Understanding the Licensing Crisis Driving Migration," 2025. Link
- [4] Cybelesoft, "Surviving the VMware Licensing Shift: How to Navigate the 72-Core Minimum," 2025. Link
- [5] Sangfor, "VMware Licensing 2026: New Pricing, Subscriptions & Top Alternatives," 2025. Link
- [6] VMware / Broadcom Community, "End of vSphere 7.0 Cycle and New Subscription Model," 2025. Link
- [7] Proxmox Server Solutions GmbH, "Pricing for Subscription Plans – Proxmox Virtual Environment," 2026. Link
- [8] MiniServer.store, "Proxmox VE Community – Yearly Subscription," 2026. Link
- [9] Stromasys, "Cloud Virtualization vs. On-Premises: 2025 Comparison Guide," 2025. Link
- [10] Microsoft / Azure Stack HCI Docs, "Azure Stack HCI (Azure Local) Overview and Pricing," 2025. Link
- [11] S-PRO, "Cloud vs On-Premise Cost Comparison — 2024 Update," 2025. Link
- [12] Mirantis, "Top 13 Benefits of Virtualization for Enterprises," 2025. Link
- [13] Citrix, "Application Virtualization vs. Desktop Virtualization," 2022. Link
© 2026 DP3. All rights reserved. Pricing and product details are approximate and subject to change; verify directly with vendors before budgeting. This document is provided for informational purposes and does not constitute a binding recommendation.