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Migration cost guide

How much does a VMware migration actually cost?

Typical all-in costs run $700–$2,100 per VM, but the range exists for reasons you can control. Here's every line item, the hidden costs nobody quotes, and how migrating compares to staying on VMware for less.

Ask three vendors what your migration will cost and you'll get three numbers that aren't comparable, one quotes only licensing, one only professional services, one a "starting at" figure that assumes everything goes perfectly. This guide puts all the line items in one place so you can build a real budget.

Quick read: For typical mid-market environments, plan on roughly $700–$2,100 per VM all-in for the migration itself (discovery through cutover), plus the recurring cost of the new platform. A 100-VM shop should budget ~$70k–$210k one-time; a 500-VM shop ~$350k–$1M+. These are typical ranges, not quotes, your inventory drives your number.

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The per-VM framing

Per-VM cost is the most honest way to compare proposals, because it forces every cost into one denominator. What moves a VM from the bottom of the range to the top:

Complexity tierTypical cost per VMWhat's in this tier
Simple$700–$1,000Stateless app/web servers, file servers, dev/test; few dependencies; modern OS
Moderate$1,000–$1,500Standard business apps, domain controllers, mid-size databases; some interdependencies
Complex$1,500–$2,100+Clustered databases, ERP, legacy OS, hard-coded IPs, compliance scope, tight downtime windows

Most environments are a mix, commonly 50/35/15 across the tiers, which is why blended budgets tend to land near $1,000–$1,300 per VM.

The full line-item breakdown

Illustrative ranges for a 100-VM mid-market migration. Treat these as planning bands, not quotes.

Line itemTypical range (100 VMs)Notes
Discovery & assessment$10k–$30kInventory, dependency mapping, app owner interviews; often credited back by the migration partner
Target platform licensing (yr 1)$0–$150k+Proxmox near-zero; Hyper-V often covered by existing Windows licensing; Nutanix and hyperscaler VMware at the top
Hardware (if refreshing)$0–$300k$0 for cloud/managed targets or reusing hosts; HCI nodes at the top end
Migration tooling$0–$25kNutanix Move and Proxmox importers are free; HCX bundled with some targets; third-party tools priced per VM
Professional services / labor$40k–$120kThe largest controllable item; internal staff time counts even when it isn't invoiced
Retraining & certification$5k–$25kAdmin training on the new stack; backup/DR tooling changes included
Parallel-run overlap1–3 months dual costYou pay for both environments during waves, budget it explicitly

Hidden costs that blow up budgets

  • Application testing and validation. The single most underestimated item, commonly 25–50% of total labor. Every app owner sign-off takes calendar time and meetings.
  • Network rework. Re-IP'ing, firewall rules, load balancer configs, VPN endpoints. Hard-coded IPs in legacy apps turn a simple move into a project.
  • Backup and DR re-platforming. Your Veeam/Zerto/Commvault setup is built around vSphere APIs; the target platform may need new licensing or a different product.
  • Storage egress and replication transfer. Mostly a cloud-target issue; seeding hundreds of TB has both bandwidth cost and calendar cost.
  • Rollback insurance. Keeping source hosts powered and licensed until validation completes, which can collide with your VMware renewal date if you cut timing too fine.
  • Staff backfill and overtime. Your team still has day jobs during cutover weekends.
Rule of thumb: take your bottom-up estimate and add 20–30% contingency. Migrations that finish under budget are the ones that budgeted for the testing.

The comparison nobody quotes: staying on VMware via a managed provider

A platform migration isn't the only way off Broadcom's pricing. Moving your environment to a managed VMware provider (a VCSP partner such as 11:11 Systems, Expedient, or TierPoint) keeps vSphere intact, workloads move with vMotion/HCX rather than being converted, so the "migration" cost is a fraction of a replatform:

PathOne-time cost (100 VMs, typical)DisruptionWhere the savings come from
Replatform (Proxmox/Hyper-V/Nutanix)$70k–$210kModerate–highEliminating Broadcom licensing entirely; biggest 5-year TCO win
Managed VMware provider$15k–$60kLowProvider's VCSP scale pricing + retiring your hardware/data center spend
Hyperscaler VMware (AVS/GCVE)$30k–$80kLowUsually none vs. Broadcom direct, you pay for speed and consolidation, not savings
Renew with Broadcom$0NoneNone, this is the baseline everyone else beats

Which path wins depends on horizon: managed VMware delivers savings fastest; a replatform usually wins by year 3–5, especially when a hardware refresh was due anyway. Our on-prem vs. cloud guide covers the TCO logic, and the comparison matrix ranks all eight paths.

Building the business case

Frame it as 3-year TCO, not migration price:

  • Status quo: (Broadcom renewal × 3) + hardware refresh + the risk premium of doing this again at the next renewal.
  • Each alternative: one-time migration cost + (new platform run cost × 3).

Most mid-market environments facing a 2–5× renewal find at least one alternative that pays back inside 12–24 months. Run your own numbers in the free cost calculator, it takes about two minutes, or skip straight to a priced, advisor-built comparison with a free assessment.

Real numbers, not ranges

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