5 Smart Ways IT Leaders Are Planning for VMware vSphere 8 End of Support in 2027

Dee-Dee Atta
Director - VMware Product Marketing
4 min read

IT leaders are navigating increasing complexity as multiple vendor-driven shifts converge at once. Broadcom is ending general support for VMware vSphere 8 perpetual licenses on October 11th, 2027, pushing users to move to VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) bundles. At the same time, Oracle and SAP are urging customers to migrate to their proprietary cloud environments, such as OCI and SAP Cloud ERP.

Taken together, these parallel transitions are creating significant pressure for many organizations, as considerations around disruption, cost and risk are weighed against the promised benefits.

But here’s the reality OEM vendors rarely emphasize: Despite deadlines, choice still remains. Forward-thinking IT leaders are choosing a smart path — one grounded in ownership, stability and timing that prioritizes the business needs, not the vendor’s.

Here are five ways IT leaders are pushing back on vSphere 8 end of support and taking control of their future.

1. Recognizing that VMware’s 2027 vSphere 8 end of support deadline isn’t a mandate

Broadcom’s End-of-General Support (EoGS) date for VMware perpetual licenses, specifically vSphere 8.0 on October 11th 2027, is often positioned as a hard stop. In practice, it’s just the point at which the vendor ends its support — not your right to continue running, securing and optimizing your VMware environment.

IT leaders are increasingly reframing the conversation internally:

  • This is not a forced migration deadline.
  • This is not a requirement to move to VCF.
  • This is an opportunity to reassess options.

By understanding the difference between an arbitrary, vendor-imposed deadline and an actual business mandate, organizations can confidently put a stop to the migration discussion, regain negotiating power and secure the breathing room necessary to decide what’s next.

2. Retaining ownership and control over perpetual VMware licenses

One of the most overlooked facts in the VMware conversation is also the most critical one to keep in mind: You already own your perpetual licenses.

That ownership gives IT leaders leverage. Rather than replacing such a highly valuable, forever asset with a subscription-only bundle, many organizations are instead choosing to:

Rather than succumbing to vendor pressure, leaders are opting to keep their perpetual licenses and continue running their proven VMware environments — for as long as they decide.

3. Extending VMware’s lifespan with independent support

Rather than defaulting to Broadcom’s roadmap, many organizations are turning to third-party support to extend the life of their VMware investments.

With independent support for VMware from a proven partner such as Rimini Street, the global leader of third-party support for VMware, organizations can maintain the stability of their environments well beyond 2027, get enterprise-grade support with guaranteed response times and stabilize costs while evaluating long-term infrastructure strategies — including moving to alternatives such as Nutanix AHV, Proxmox, Microsoft Hyper-V or RedHat OpenShift.

As a result, modernization becomes an intentional, business-driven effort — not a reactive move influenced by vendor deadlines.

The examples below show choice in action, with IT leaders prioritizing stability and maintaining perpetual license investments while assessing future options.

  • Alcatel-Lucent Enterprise (ALE): Faced with rising costs, ALE utilized Rimini Street’s third-party support for both its VMware and Oracle environments. This strategic shift provided the company with enterprise-grade stability, giving it the breathing room to modernize on its own terms while preserving what works.
  • Lwart Environmental Solutions: To protect both its mission-critical SAP and VMware environment, Lwart turned to Rimini Street. This allowed the company to avoid a “subscription trap” and focus its energy on operational innovation and sustainability goals with the support of one trusted partner.

What IT leaders are discovering is that third-party support isn’t about standing still — it’s about buying time to make smarter decisions and accelerating innovation when and where it makes sense.

4. Leveraging proactive security versus reactive patching

One of the greatest concerns surrounding Broadcom’s vSphere 8 end of support deadline is security, as perpetual license holders won’t receive security patches for vulnerabilities after October 2027. But IT leaders have found a solution to that, too — arguably a better one.

Organizations are increasingly adopting proactive measures to help safeguard VMware ESXi/ESXi host environments, using solutions such as Rimini Protect™ Advanced Hypervisor Security, powered by Vali Cyber® to:

  • Protect VMware and other Linux-based hypervisors at the kernel level
  • Defend against zero-day threats in real time
  • Reduce operational risk without constant patch cycles

This shift reframes security from a vendor dependency to an architecture decision — one that remains effective regardless of OEM timelines.

5. Investing in meaningful business outcomes

Seasoned IT leaders know that true innovation isn’t about moving workloads to a new location. It’s about achieving maximum impact with the resources available.

That’s why they’re stabilizing and optimizing their VMware environments today, freeing up significant budget — often 50% or more on total support costs — to invest in projects that move the needle, including:

  • AI-driven automation
  • Advanced data analytics
  • Enhanced CX

Rather than bowing to pressure from Broadcom to complete an unnecessary migration to VCF, leaders are allocating resources toward efforts that drive competitive advantage and growth.

The bottom line: Control the timeline, define the outcome

The 2027 VMware vSphere 8 end of support milestone doesn’t define your strategy.

IT leaders who separate vendor messaging from business reality are gaining a clear advantage. By retaining perpetual licenses and introducing independent support, organizations can maintain stability, control costs and extend the value of existing investments. This approach enables more deliberate, lower-risk modernization while freeing budget for higher-impact initiatives.

Explore your options with Rimini Street.

Maximizing the Value of VMware vSphere Perpetual Licenses

Discover how to optimize existing vSphere investments after Broadcom’s EoGS with continued support, security, roadmap guidance and optionality.

FAQs

What is the vSphere 8 end of general support date?

The end of general support date for vSphere 8 is October 11th, 2027. On that date, VMware ESXi 8.x, vCenter Server 8.x and vSAN 8.x perpetual licensed products will also reach end of general support. After this date, VMware will no longer extend support for vSphere 8 environments. This means VMware will no longer provide OS support, product updates, bug fixes or security patches. This leaves license holders of these products with a gap in support and increased exposure to vulnerabilities.

When is the end of technical guidance date for vSphere 8?

The end of technical guidance date for vSphere 8 is October 11th 2029, two years after the vSphere 8 end of support date.

I have relied on VMware for support for years. What is third-party support? 

Third-party support, of which Rimini Street is a global leader, is a direct alternative to the annual maintenance and support services provided by the original software manufacturer (the OEM). While you have traditionally looked to VMware for updates and troubleshooting, third-party support providers offer an independent, often more comprehensive service model that gives you greater control over your IT roadmap.

How would our organization transition from Broadcom to Rimini Street for our VMware support, security and maintenance requirements?

Transitioning from Broadcom to Rimini Street is a streamlined process designed to ensure zero downtime and immediate cost stabilization. Because you already own your perpetual VMware licenses, the shift isn’t a “migration” of your data or VMs — it’s a service shift of your support and security layers.

Rimini Street follows a proven AI-supported process, refined based on 20+ years of experience with 6,600 client contracts. It spans IT virtualization environment mapping, interoperability validation, onboarding, knowledge transfer, security implementation and hardening.

What VMware perpetual license products can Rimini Street support?

Rimini Support™ for VMware covers more VMware products than any other third-party support provider. These include vSphere, ESX/ESXi hypervisors, vCenter, vSAN, NSX, vRealize Suite, Aria Operations, Tanzu, Site Recovery Manager, Integrated OpenStack (VIO) and Workstation. Our team of Rimini Support engineers can also address your cases on end-user computing solutions such as Horizon and Workspace One, as well as an unlimited number of hypervisor hosts. Our standard Rimini Support for VMware offering provides clients with unlimited incoming support calls at a fixed, transparent price.

As VMware 8 perpetual licenses reach the end of support by Broadcom in October 2027, how can I buy time to evaluate all of my options while keeping our VMware investments running smoothly and securely?

Broadcom’s transition to a subscription-only model means that when your current support contract ends, you immediately lose access to new patches, technical support and updates. However, you don’t have to let a vendor-dictated roadmap force you into a rushed migration or expensive subscription.

Rimini Street buys organizations time to evaluate IT virtualization options while keeping current VMware investments stable and secure. We can also provide roadmap and license advisory services throughout the journey.

About the author

About the author

Dee-Dee Atta

Director - VMware Product Marketing