7 VMware Support Challenges Every Cloud-First Enterprise Needs to Address

Published On: July 28, 2025

If you manage VMware infrastructure today, you’ve likely noticed how fast the ground is shifting. Licensing models are changing, pricing is rising, and long-standing tools and workflows now come with new restrictions. You’re under pressure to make smart decisions fast, without disrupting critical systems or compromising performance.

In this article, we’ll break down the licensing changes shaping your options, the ripple effects across your stack, and how external managed services can help you take back control. You’ll see what’s driving the disruption and how to move forward with less risk and more clarity.

Let’s start by looking at how Broadcom changed the game.

 

 

Broadcom’s VMware Takeover

You likely remember the announcement. In May 2022, Broadcom announced its intention to acquire VMware in a deal valued at $61 billion. That news sent a wave through every IT team running virtualization technology at scale.

Over the next year, you probably heard the growing concerns, which were reduced product focus, stricter contract terms, and fewer support options. Many of those warnings came true.

By November 2023, the acquisition closed. Broadcom paid $69 billion, and VMware shares were removed from the NYSE. What followed was a shift that changed your planning playbook. Product bundles replaced legacy SKUs, subscription-based licensing became the default, and familiar support channels turned harder to reach..

That shift affected costs and likely raised questions across IT infrastructure about continuity, risk, and future alignment. You can learn more about it in this video:

 


 

So what does that mean for your roadmap now? Next, you’ll see the most pressing challenges you might be facing.

 

 

What Are the Challenges of VMware Broadcom?

Since Broadcom took over VMware, you’ve likely felt the impact firsthand. The changes go beyond branding or corporate structure. You’re now facing a new reality that touches licensing, support, cost, and long-term planning. The truth is, this shift affects not just your daily operations but your broader infrastructure strategy.

So what’s really changed and why does it matter for your team?

Here are the most urgent challenges VMware users like you are now dealing with. Each one comes with real consequences, especially if your workloads rely heavily on vSphere Foundation, NSX, Horizon, or VMware Cloud Foundation.

 

Price Increases

You’ve likely seen the numbers yourself. Since Broadcom stepped in, many teams like yours have reported license renewal increases of 3× to 6×. One admin shared how their VxRail cluster jumped from AUD $40,000 to $120,000, and these aren’t isolated cases. You’re now dealing with forced core-based pricing and bundled add-ons you never asked for, like NSX or vSAN.

If you held perpetual licenses, those are gone as well. Broadcom’s shift to a strict subscription model leaves little room to negotiate. Legal notices and audit warnings are being used to push legacy customers into new contracts, often with no grace period.

Your cost optimization efforts become harder when your TCO climbs with each renewal. For many, this pricing model adds pressure not just on budgets but on future planning. That’s because these hikes force last-minute procurement changes, delay modernization projects, and put growth roadmaps at risk.

 

Business Model Changes

Everyone already felt the effects of VMware’s shift under Broadcom. What used to be a flexible model built on perpetual licenses is now subscription-only. If you miss a renewal deadline, you’ll face a 20% penalty, retroactively applied. This inflates your budget assumptions and triggers emergency approvals mid-quarter. That policy took effect in April 2025.

You also can’t buy only what you need anymore. Broadcom removed smaller SKUs, bundling features like NSX, vSAN, and Horizon into larger suites such as vSphere solutions. This forces you into overspending on tools you may not fully use.

To make matters worse, audit frequency has increased. If your usage isn’t fully aligned with their latest contracts, you’re now at higher risk of disruptions and cost exposure. In 2024, European trade groups flagged these changes as restrictive, especially for teams that previously relied on a modular approach.

If you lead licensing or budget strategy, this shift adds pressure fast, especially when you’re already juggling management complexity across hybrid environments and competing platform priorities.

 

Compliance & Licensing Risks

Licensing changes now expose teams to unplanned compliance risks and surprise costs that weren’t part of the original budget. If your team holds expired perpetual licenses, you may have already learned they no longer entitle you to patches or support.

Some IT leaders even report getting notices to uninstall updates unless they renew on Broadcom’s terms. The shift to bundled SKUs has only made it harder to map what you’re allowed to use. Teams waste cycles decoding entitlements, delaying upgrades, and risking accidental use of unlicensed features that can trigger audits.

Speaking of audits, these have also picked up.

Broadcom now triggers compliance checks even years after your contract ends. That puts your audit defense under strain, especially if your records aren’t perfectly aligned with current terms.

And when trying to resolve licensing questions, some teams report that the support portal won’t connect them with live agents. Instead, they get redirects or hang-ups from the increase in traffic. That means you’re left without clear upgrade paths or visibility into what tier covers the features you already rely on. These gaps expose infrastructure to downtime risks. As such, they force leadership into reactive decisions that strain resources and timelines.

 

Support & Responsiveness

Support has become slower and harder to reach since the transition. If you’ve logged support tickets recently, you may have waited days for a response, even for high-priority issues. Some users report that even P2 incidents go unanswered for over a week. That’s a big drop from what you were used to with legacy VMware support.

At the same time, direct help is harder to get. Broadcom removed the Registered Partner tier, which many SMBs relied on for quick resolutions. Without it, smaller teams are routed through resellers or community channels. That adds friction and delays, especially when issues require escalation.

You’ve probably noticed the shift to community forums as well. As official customer support weakens, more users turn to Reddit or Broadcom’s message boards just to troubleshoot basic issues. The result is inconsistent help and rising frustration, especially when you’re managing a wide product portfolio with limited internal support resources.

 

Expertise Gaps

Broadcom’s acquisition triggered deep cuts across VMware’s engineering and support teams. More than half the workforce, over 22,000 employees, were let go, including senior architects from core platforms like Cloud Foundation. If you’ve depended on VMware’s expert network in the past, that layer of experience is now harder to reach.

The impact runs deep for your internal team as well. If you manage a lean staff, keeping up with constant product changes and roadmap shifts has likely become harder. New platforms like vSphere ESXi demand ongoing tuning, yet internal skills often lag behind.

Training budgets haven’t kept pace either. Many IT leads deal with stagnant funding, even as workloads shift toward container orchestration and hybrid environments. Without ongoing investment, your team is left to patch knowledge gaps using third-party consultants (a costly short-term fix).

The longer this gap continues, the more it slows innovation, blocks upgrades, and limits your ability to plan infrastructure with confidence.

 

Migration & Integration Struggles

Many users like you have faced major setbacks trying to migrate or integrate systems post-acquisition. A number of teams reported losing hundreds of licenses during the support processes. Some got back only a fraction, sometimes just 8 or 9 licenses, and had to wait weeks for updates. That lack of migration support leaves you exposed, especially if your infrastructure depends on continuity.

The struggle doesn’t stop there. If you’re building around cloud-native technologies, integrating VMware has become more difficult. Several organizations are moving to Kubernetes or OpenShift because these platforms now offer simpler, more flexible integrations.

And if you’re running a hybrid cloud platform, rigid Cloud Foundation bundles can slow you down. Broadcom’s push to consolidate VMware into unified suites often clashes with your need for modularity.

When tools don’t fit your architecture, you’re stuck with more manual work, more risk, and slower delivery, all while managing tight timelines and growing complexity.

 

Regulatory & Market Pressures

Regulators and large buyers are now pressuring Broadcom’s VMware unit over pricing and licensing behavior. In June 2025, the EU’s ECCO flagged VMware’s bundled licenses with a red alert, warning that 800% to 1,500% cost jumps risk undermining cloud service providers in regulated sectors. This kind of market concentration is drawing closer inspection under the Digital Markets Act.

Large enterprises have also raised flags. Many say the forced bundles leave no room for flexibility or price negotiation. In fact, a Rimini Street survey shows 98% of VMware customers are actively exploring other options to avoid further lock-in. That includes platforms like AHV and Proxmox, which allow more modular control.

In regulated fields like finance and healthcare, you’re likely to see faster shifts to Kubernetes, OpenStack, and other public-private blends. That’s because leaders in these industries are now prioritizing vendor independence and audit agility over legacy contracts.

So what can you do? Let’s walk you through real-world VMware migration paths that actually work.

 

 

VMware Migration: Real-World Solutions

If you’ve decided to move away from VMware, the next challenge is choosing a migration path that fits your architecture, budget, and timeline. The options vary widely in complexity, cost, and control. These are the most practical strategies enterprises like yours are using right now to move forward.

 

Open-Source Virtualization

Open-source virtualization lets you cut costs and take back control. Platforms like Proxmox VE and KVM remove licensing fees and let you shape your virtualized compute environment.

Proxmox has over 3,000 customers worldwide as of early 2025, especially among SMBs and IT teams leaving VMware. You get strong community support, full access to the codebase, and the ability to customize storage and network configurations to match your needs.

That’s a key advantage when dealing with unique workloads or managing mixed infrastructure. You also avoid bundled software and complex renewals, which makes long-term planning simpler and more transparent.

 

Cloud-Native Technologies

Shifting to cloud-native technologies helps you move beyond VMware entirely. Kubernetes and containers replace the need for a virtual machine by simplifying how you manage workloads.

One telecom provider, Aussie Broadband, eliminated nearly 200 VMs by switching to a single bare-metal Kubernetes setup. This helped them cut licensing costs and CPU usage.

You also gain speed and agility. In 2025, Kubernetes users report 300% faster deployments, 80% shorter lead times, and 73% fewer failures. That’s because containers work well with CI/CD tools and scale quickly.

If you’re managing modern apps or building DevOps pipelines, this shift gives you more flexibility and long-term cost control.

 

Hybrid Cloud Strategies

Hybrid cloud strategies give you more control over cost and flexibility. Instead of locking into a single vendor like VMware, you can place workloads where they make the most sense. In 2025, a financial services firm cut its cloud bill by 30% using both AWS and Azure by shifting apps based on performance and pricing.

According to a 2025 Broadcom survey, 53% of IT leaders now favor private cloud for new workloads, with 69% exploring repatriation from the public cloud. This split model works well for regulated workloads and fluctuating demand. It also reduces reliance on large bundles and gives you more vendor choice.

 

Hyperconverged Infrastructure (HCI)

Hyperconverged infrastructure gives you a simpler path away from VMware. With vendors like Nutanix and Scale Computing, you can combine compute, storage, and networking into one manageable system. That means less hardware, faster scaling, and fewer moving parts.

Scale Computing’s HC3 platform is gaining ground because it costs less and has a cleaner interface than many traditional stacks. Here’s what one IT team said:

 

Scale Computing HC3 was not only cheaper than every solution that we looked at. It also had the easiest interface to learn and the least amount of hardware. We eliminated any and all setup/implementation costs as we were able to set up the cluster ourselves. All of the other services made me feel like I needed a master’s degree to rack the units and set it up.

 

Nutanix offers similar benefits with more automation and support for hybrid setups. These platforms help you reduce overhead without sacrificing reliability.

 

Alternative Cloud Service Providers

Using major cloud providers like AWS, Azure, or Google Cloud lets you move VMware workloads without starting from scratch. These platforms offer VMware-compatible environments, so your existing tools and processes still work.

AWS, for example, provides migration credits through its MAP program (up to $400 per migrated VM) to ease transition costs. Azure VMware Solution can cut long-term costs using hybrid licensing. Google Cloud’s VMware Engine also supports live migrations with minimal downtime.

Each platform gives you built-in options to modernize applications, trim spending, and reduce reliance on traditional hypervisors. Now let’s look at how Nova helps you leave VMware support headaches behind.

 

 

Say Goodbye to VMware Support Challenges with Nova

If VMware support has become slow, expensive, or unreliable, Nova gives you a smarter way forward. Our experts help you cut costs, reduce risk, and stay fully supported. These are the ways Nova simplifies support and brings control back to your hands.

 

VMware Bridge Support

Bridge support gives you breathing room. Instead of rushing into a migration or signing a Broadcom license renewal, you can maintain your current VMware environment and focus on what’s next.

This service helps you keep systems stable and secure while giving you time to evaluate long-term strategies. It’s a practical solution for teams under budget pressure or internal review. You avoid unplanned upgrades, license audits, or new compliance risks.

With Nova, you can extend lifecycle support, reduce reliance on Broadcom, and buy time to transition smoothly, without taking on technical debt or risking operational gaps across vSphere, NSX, or Horizon.

 

Optimize VMware Costs & Licensing

Nova helps you assess where you stand today with VMware licensing. This includes looking at your current license types, workloads, and renewal risks. From there, you can explore ways to shift from CapEx to OpEx using hardware buy/lease-back programs.

This is especially useful if you’re consolidating infrastructure or planning a cloud transition. You also gain better cost control by avoiding expensive bundles and instead funding modernization steps through existing assets.

The goal is to keep your environment running efficiently now while setting it up for future flexibility. It’s about controlling spend while still maintaining technical capability and uptime.

 

AWS Migration Roadmap

Getting to AWS isn’t just about lift-and-shift because it starts with a clear plan. Nova helps you map your current VMware footprint, including workloads, dependencies, and system performance.

You then get a custom migration roadmap with timelines, risk profiles, and budgeting models. This helps your team identify what to move, when, and how, so you avoid downtime and cost overruns.

Also, you get a readiness evaluation for AWS-native services like EC2, S3, or container orchestration. This ensures your apps won’t just run in the cloud but improve over time. It’s a structured process built around long-term value, not short-term rehosting.

 

VMware Cloud on AWS Enablement

If you want to move quickly, Nova helps you launch VMware Cloud on AWS without re-architecting. You can keep using tools like vCenter, NSX, and your current automation scripts. This lets you move production workloads without retraining staff or rewriting playbooks.

For many teams, this becomes a stepping stone to deeper cloud integration. You gain the speed of cloud provisioning with the familiarity of your existing environment.

Another thing that you can do is set up hybrid models (running some workloads on-prem and others in AWS) without sacrificing control. It’s a fast, flexible path that respects your existing architecture while pointing to a more scalable future.

 

AWS MAP Program

The AWS Migration Acceleration Program (MAP) gives you a way to fund your VMware exit without upfront strain. Nova works with AWS to align MAP credits with your migration plan to help you cover costs for infrastructure, tools, and labor.

You can make the shift to cloud financially neutral (or even cost-positive) depending on your footprint and asset strategy. Unlike CapEx buybacks, this focuses on funding and enablement, not hardware.

It supports everything from assessment to execution, covering both licensed workloads and third-party tools. That means fewer delays, faster ROI, and a clean financial path to cloud transformation, especially for large-scale projects.

 

Fully Managed VMware Operations

You don’t need to manage VMware alone. Nova provides full operational coverage across vSphere, NSX, Horizon, and vSAN so your team can focus on business outcomes, not patch schedules.

You get automated updates, monitored performance, and hardened security configurations without the risk of breaking live workloads. It’s all wrapped under one SLA, with one point of contact.

Also, you stay in control without having to micromanage. Real-time dashboards give you visibility into uptime, health, and usage. And if issues arise, a response is built into the service. It’s structured for scale and stability, especially if your internal team is lean or overextended.

 

Backup, DR & Security

You already know that the VMware stack needs uptime and resilience. Nova helps you deploy VMware-native backup, disaster recovery, and security solutions that match your compliance needs. You gain restore capabilities without adding unnecessary complexity or third-party lock-in.

The service covers data retention, workload mobility, and encryption across regulated environments. That includes support for healthcare, finance, and government-grade controls.

Plus, you get tested failover strategies and response planning for both outages and breaches. Everything is designed to work with what you already have, so you don’t have to rebuild your stack just to protect it. It’s safety without starting from scratch.

 

Expert VMware Support Without the Overhead

Hiring VMware experts isn’t always realistic, especially for teams with fixed budgets or limited headcount. That’s why Nova gives you on-demand access to certified professionals who can support Horizon, vSAN, NSX, and more. You get the help without having to build a team from scratch.

Multilingual support is available in English, Spanish, and Portuguese to make global operations easier. Whether you’re dealing with scaling challenges, advanced networking issues, or version conflicts, you’ll get answers quickly.

The service is designed to support lean teams under pressure and help you stay productive, meet SLAs, and avoid costly mistakes without taking on full-time hires.

 

 

Ready to Leave VMware Uncertainty Behind?

If the shifting costs, contracts, and uncertainty of Broadcom’s VMware roadmap are slowing you down, it may be time to change direction. With Nova, you don’t need to rush into a full rebuild or lock yourself into one rigid path. You can stabilize your stack, cut costs, and plan your next move with clarity, not chaos.

From interim support to cloud transitions, Nova helps you stay secure, stay compliant, and stay in control. Our VMware support solutions are built for scale and shaped around your infrastructure priorities.

Tired of the VMware rollercoaster? Nova can help. Reach out to explore your options for sustainable, stress-free support and modernization.

 

 

FAQs

What would be the alternative options of software vendor support for Oracle (or SAP or VMware)?

Third-party providers like Rimini Street, Spinnaker Support, and Support Revolution are the main alternatives. They offer lower-cost support with flexible SLAs and no forced upgrades. This helps you keep control of your roadmap while getting expert help across legacy and complex environments.

 

Does VMware support macOS?

VMware Fusion supports macOS on Intel-based Macs, but not on Apple Silicon. ESXi 7.0 was the last version to support Mac hardware. If you’re using M1, M2, or M3 Macs, there’s no official way to run macOS VMs natively under VMware.

 

Why are so many people leaving VMware?

After Broadcom’s acquisition, many left due to major price hikes, license changes, and reduced support quality. The removal of popular SKUs like Essentials also made things worse for SMBs. People are turning to Proxmox, Nutanix, and Hyper-V to reduce costs and gain flexibility.

 

How do I increase my VMware support case?

To increase your case priority, give full diagnostics and clearly set the severity level. Reference KB articles or contract terms and escalate early through the portal. You can also request senior support or go through Premier partners for faster handling.

 

What is replacing VMware?

VMware is being replaced by platforms that offer lower costs, more flexibility, and simpler management, especially open-source hypervisors, hybrid cloud setups, and cloud-native solutions. Alternatives include Proxmox, Nutanix AHV, Hyper-V, KVM, OpenStack, and VMware-compatible cloud services from AWS and Azure.

 

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