The New Economics
of the VMware Exit
Moving beyond the licensing swap to solve the hidden friction of infrastructure transitions.
The math of a conventional exit is incomplete.
Broadcom’s per-core licensing and 300–500% cost increases turned a technology preference into a financial emergency. Every major hypervisor alternative addresses the license cost. But organizations are discovering two hidden cost layers that break the original business case.
Savings
Continuity
Ambush
of Execution
The cost nobody planned for.
Because inefficient hypervisors enforce strict hardware compatibility lists, most migrations require new servers. AI hyperscaler demand has decimated the enterprise supply chain, making those servers impossibly expensive and slow to arrive.
RAM (DDR5)
+58–63%Prices up in Q2 2026. 1TB RAM config = $33,600 — 35% of total BOM cost.
Storage (Enterprise SSD)
+472%Year over year. A 30TB TLC drive now costs $17,500.
Total Node Cost
$20K → $40K+2024 quote vs. 2026 reality — plus 3–6 month lead times on top.
The penalty of the hardware wait.
Every month of delay waiting for hardware is another Broadcom billing cycle. The exit that was supposed to save money bleeds capital before a single workload moves.
Lead Time
Sunk Cost
A CapEx hardware event becomes an OpEx software transition.
VergeOS runs on any x86 server already powered on and racked in the data center. The hardware cost problem that stalls every conventional migration disappears from the project plan entirely. Migration starts immediately.
Conventional Migration
- New servers required (HCL enforcement)
- $40K+ per node at 2026 pricing
- 3–6 month hardware lead times
- CapEx budget approval required
- Broadcom payments continue during wait
✓ VergeOS
- Runs on existing x86 servers
- Zero hardware budget required
- Migration starts day one
- OpEx software subscription only
- No Broadcom double-payment period
Reclaiming stranded capacity through platform efficiency.
Conventional stacks consume massive resources before a single workload runs. VergeOS reclaims stranded memory, allowing the exact same physical servers to run more workloads.
On a 1TB-RAM server at 2026 DDR5 pricing, the overhead difference = $20,000+ per node in recovered capacity
Multiplying existing flash through global deduplication.
VergeOS inherently deduplicates storage globally across all VMs and all nodes. Instead of buying new SSDs at peak 2026 pricing, the flash tier draws from an already-deduplicated pool, exponentially increasing the effective capacity of existing hardware.
Conventional Silos
Duplicated data across separate volumes
Wasted capacity across every volume
VergeOS Global Pool
One deduplicated block store for all VMs
Unique data only — shared across all VMs, all nodes, all volumes
3:1+ effective capacity multiplier
The backup infrastructure survives the migration intact.
Through native oVirt API compatibility, existing Veeam deployments protect VergeOS workloads at full production scale with no custom development. Migration deploys in under an hour.
Existing Veeam Infrastructure
- Policies already configured
- Runbooks already tested
- Schedules already running
- Team already trained
VergeOS Environment
- oVirt API connects natively
- No custom development
- Full production protection day one
- Deploy in under an hour
Three layers of savings. Simultaneously.
VergeOS removes hardware economics from the equation entirely while eliminating cost layers that conventional alternatives leave in place. No other VMware alternative delivers all three simultaneously.
How VergeOS compares to the alternatives.
Not all VMware exits are equal. The platform you choose determines whether the exit stays within budget or replicates the exact cost structure you were trying to escape.
| VMware (Broadcom) | Nutanix | Proxmox | VergeOS | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Licensing Model | Per-core subscription, 300–500% increase | Per-node or core, escalates at renewal | Subscription or community (limited support) | Flat per-cluster. All features included. |
| Hardware Requirements | Strict HCL, certified hardware only | Strict HCL, proprietary storage appliances | Broad x86 support, no storage integration | Any x86. Runs on 8-year-old servers. No HCL restrictions. |
| RAM Overhead | 15–25% before a VM runs | 24–32GB CVM reservation per node | Moderate — no hyperconverged storage overhead | ✓ 2–3%. Single-kernel architecture. |
| Storage Architecture | vSAN (proprietary, separate license) | Proprietary distributed storage (adds overhead) | External storage or Ceph (complex to manage) | ✓ Global dedupe across all nodes and VMs. No external array needed. |
| Veeam Compatibility | ✓ Native | ✓ Native | △ Community plugin, limited | ✓ Native via oVirt API. Zero reconfiguration. |
| Migration Approach | N/A — incumbent | Requires new hardware. Move-then-migrate. | Manual VM export/import. No live migration. | ✓ Live sync-and-cutover. Runs on existing hardware day one. |
| Multitenancy | ✗ Bolt-on via NSX (expensive) | ✗ Limited, complex to configure | ✗ Manual VLAN segmentation only | ✓ Native nested tenancy. Full isolation per tenant. |
| Codebase | 5+ separate products (vSphere, vSAN, NSX, vCenter...) | Multiple layers (AOS, AHV, Prism) | Hypervisor only — separate tools for everything else | ✓ Single OS kernel. Compute + storage + networking + DR in one layer. |
| Hardware Budget to Migrate | N/A | High — new certified nodes required | Moderate — flexible but no integrated storage | ✓ Zero. Runs on hardware already in production. |
| Time to First Migrated VM | N/A | 3–6+ months (hardware procurement) | Weeks (manual migration process) | ✓ Same week. No hardware wait. |
Architectural superiority proven at enterprise scale.
Eliminating platform bloat allows organizations to consolidate physical footprints while extending the lifespan of their existing investments.
Topgolf
Consolidated multi-site VMware infrastructure onto VergeOS. Migration completed on existing hardware — no server refresh required.
100+ venuesAlinsco Insurance
Live migration on existing hardware during business hours with zero downtime. Full production from day one.
Zero downtimeVergeIO Hands-On Lab
VergeIO runs its own production lab on 12 servers averaging 8 years old — 55+ active lab instances simultaneously. When a node fails, workloads migrate automatically. Zero user impact. Not a proof of concept. Production on hardware most vendors would not certify.
Evaluating the Exit.
A definitive methodology to expose hidden frictions and calculate the true cost of execution.
Baseline Run Rate
Calculate VMware subscription + 25–30% support fees + annual escalation.
Conventional Hardware Quote
Request alternative quote. Factor $40K nodes, 3–6 month lead times, and peak 2026 flash pricing.
VergeOS Recapture Math
2–3% overhead reclaims 20%. Subtract eliminated nodes from refresh requirement.
Delay Calculation
Monthly Broadcom cost × 6–12 month hardware wait. Eliminate via day-one software migration.
Questions we hear most.
Answers to the questions that come up in every VMware exit evaluation.
Does VergeOS actually run on our existing servers, or is that a marketing claim?
It is production-validated, not a claim. VergeIO runs its own hands-on lab environment on 12 servers averaging 8 years old — with 55+ active lab instances running simultaneously. When a node fails, workloads migrate automatically with zero user impact.
VergeOS has no strict hardware compatibility list. It installs on any x86 server. The architecture is designed around commodity hardware by intent — the OS handles performance through software, not hardware specification.
What happens to our Veeam backup infrastructure when we migrate?
Nothing changes. VergeOS exposes a native oVirt API, which Veeam connects to directly using its standard oVirt/RHV plugin. Your existing Veeam jobs, policies, schedules, and runbooks continue to run without modification.
Most organizations complete the Veeam-to-VergeOS connection in under an hour. There is no protection gap during or after migration, and no retraining required for the backup team.
How long does a typical VMware migration take with VergeOS?
Most mid-size environments complete the full migration in 2–4 weeks. The process uses a sync-and-cutover approach: VergeOS installs on existing hardware, VMs sync live from the VMware environment, and cutover happens per-VM with minutes of downtime rather than hours.
Because no new hardware is required, there is no procurement delay. The clock starts the day the decision is made, not the day the servers arrive.
What does VergeOS licensing cost compared to VMware?
VergeOS uses a flat per-cluster licensing model. All features — compute, storage, networking, data protection, and multitenancy — are included in a single license with no add-on modules.
Most organizations see 60–80% reduction in licensing cost versus their current Broadcom subscription. Contact VergeIO for a direct comparison against your current renewal quote.
We have strict compliance requirements. Does VergeOS support the isolation and audit controls we need?
Yes. VergeOS includes native nested multitenancy — full logical isolation at the tenant level, including separate networking, storage namespaces, and access controls. Each tenant is isolated at the OS level, not through a bolt-on overlay.
This architecture is used by managed service providers running regulated workloads across multiple isolated customer environments on shared physical infrastructure. Audit logging, RBAC, and network isolation are standard, not add-ons.
What is the 2–3% RAM overhead claim based on?
VergeOS runs as a single OS kernel. Compute, storage, networking, and data protection are all implemented within the same kernel — there is no separate hypervisor layer, storage controller, and network controller each consuming memory independently.
VMware vSphere alone typically consumes 10–15%; add vSAN and NSX and that climbs to 20–25%. At current DDR5 pricing, the difference on a 1TB node is worth more than $20,000 in recovered capacity.
Can VergeOS support GPU workloads and AI infrastructure?
Yes. VergeOS is NVIDIA-validated and supports GPU passthrough, vGPU, and MIG (Multi-Instance GPU) modes. All three can be managed through the VergeOS UI without requiring separate NVIDIA management tooling.
This makes VergeOS a viable platform for AI workstation deployments and private inference infrastructure on existing GPU-equipped servers — without the overhead tax or new hardware requirement that other hypervisors impose.
Is the hardware supply chain problem temporary? Should we wait it out?
Analysts project DDR5 and enterprise SSD pricing to remain elevated through at least 2027 as AI infrastructure demand continues to absorb data center supply. The 3–6 month lead time issue is a structural constraint on fab capacity, not a temporary inventory shortage.
Every month of waiting is another month of Broadcom subscription cost. The math favors moving now, not waiting for pricing to normalize.
The exit that finishes.
The organizations that planned early are stalled at execution. The total cost of getting off VMware is now double the original projection due to hardware inflation and backup complexity.
VergeOS is the only architecture where a licensing swap remains an OpEx software transition — executing on existing hardware, on existing budget, on an existing timeline.
verge.io · [email protected]