Quick Facts
The Enterprise Storage Battleground Has Shifted
HPE has become one of the most aggressive as-a-service converters in enterprise storage. While traditional CapEx models still dominate tier-1 workloads, the company's GreenLake platform has fundamentally changed how enterprises think about storage procurement and total cost of ownership (TCO). Unlike legacy perpetual licensing, GreenLake's pay-per-use model means you're no longer buying hardware—you're renting consumption, which changes everything about pricing power, flexibility, and budget predictability.
Understanding HPE storage pricing in 2026 requires navigating two distinct paths: the traditional CapEx route (Alletra 4000, 6000, 9000 series) and the newer consumption-based GreenLake OpEx model. The choice between them isn't just financial—it's strategic. We've benchmarked over $2.1 billion in software and infrastructure contracts across 500+ vendors and consistently found that enterprises paying list price for HPE storage are leaving 26% in savings on the table. This guide distills what HPE's sales teams won't tell you: exact pricing ranges, realistic discount benchmarks, contract traps, and renewal dynamics that actually matter.
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Submit Your Contract →HPE Storage Pricing Model Explained
HPE offers two distinct paths for enterprise storage, and understanding the difference is critical to procurement strategy.
Path 1: Traditional CapEx (Alletra Series)
The Alletra portfolio represents HPE's all-flash and hybrid storage lineup built on decades of Nimble and Primera technology. This model involves upfront capital expenditure for hardware, software, and support.
- Alletra 4000: Entry-level NVMe array targeting SMB and mid-market. Capacity ranges 5–50 TiB. Typical CapEx: $20,000–$150,000 depending on configuration and support bundling.
- Alletra 6000: Mid-range NVMe based on Nimble architecture. Supports 20–500 TiB. CapEx typically $40,000–$400,000. Most popular for general-purpose virtualization and databases.
- Alletra 9000: Tier-1 mission-critical based on Primera technology. Supports 100 TiB and beyond. CapEx ranges $200,000–$800,000+ for high-availability setups. Premium pricing reflects synchronous replication, advanced snapshots, and SLA guarantees.
- Alletra Storage MP: HPE's latest unified block-and-file array, adding file protocol support without dedicated filers. Bridges Alletra and GreenLake capabilities. CapEx $150,000–$600,000.
Traditional CapEx pricing includes hardware, software licensing (perpetual), and a mandatory first-year support contract (PointNext). Software licenses don't require renewal but PointNext support is an annual recurring cost.
Path 2: GreenLake OpEx (Consumption-Based)
GreenLake Storage delivers Alletra arrays (or HPE SimpliVity for hyper-converged) as a managed service with consumption-based billing. No upfront CapEx. You commit to a capacity minimum and pay monthly for what you use, up to a committed level. Overages carry premium rates.
GreenLake pricing structure typically includes:
- Committed Capacity: You guarantee a baseline (e.g., 100 TiB) for a 3–5 year term. Monthly fee covers this committed tier.
- Buffer Capacity: 10–20% overage threshold (negotiable). Charges apply only for consumption above the committed level.
- All-In Included: Hardware, software, infrastructure, monitoring, and basic support included in per-TiB rate. PointNext professional services are often optional but heavily upsold.
- Pricing Range: $150–$500/TiB/month depending on storage tier, redundancy, and commitment length. Large deals (500+ TiB) often achieve $100–$200/TiB/month.
GreenLake also supports file storage, object storage, and data management services, bundled at tiered pricing. Block + File bundles typically save 8–12% vs. purchasing separately.
What Enterprises Actually Pay for HPE Storage
Pricing varies widely by company size, storage tier, and negotiating leverage. Here are realistic benchmarks from our contract database.
Alletra 4000 (SMB/Mid-Market Entry)
20 TiB entry configuration: List price $60,000–$90,000. Enterprise discount: typically 40–50%, resulting in $30,000–$45,000. Smaller companies rarely achieve better than 35% off. Always negotiate this unit separately before bundling into larger packages.
Alletra 6000 (Mid-Range Workhorse)
50 TiB configuration: List price $150,000–$200,000. Enterprise discount: 40–50%, resulting in actual cost $75,000–$100,000. 100 TiB configuration: List price $300,000–$450,000. Enterprise: 45–50% off, actual cost $150,000–$225,000. This is the most price-sensitive product in HPE's lineup—resellers and channel partners will compete aggressively.
Alletra 9000 (Tier-1 Mission-Critical)
200 TiB configuration: List price $600,000–$900,000. Enterprise discount: 35–45% (lower discount rate reflects premium positioning), actual cost $330,000–$585,000. 500+ TiB configuration: List price $1.2M–$1.8M+. Enterprise: 40–50%, actual cost $600,000–$1.1M. Alletra 9000 pricing is more rigid than lower tiers—HPE protects margin on tier-1 storage.
GreenLake Block Storage (Large Enterprise)
100 TiB / 3-year commitment: Published rate $300/TiB/month ($360,000/year). Market discount: 20–30%, resulting in $210,000–$288,000/year. 500 TiB / 5-year commitment: Published rate $250/TiB/month ($1.5M/year). Market discount: 25–35%, actual cost $975,000–$1.125M/year. 1,000+ TiB / 5-year commitment: Published rate $200/TiB/month ($2.4M/year). Market discount: 30–35%, actual cost $1.56M–$1.68M/year.
GreenLake discounts are tied to commitment length and total committed capacity. 3-year deals receive lighter discounts than 5-year deals. Enterprises that lock in 5+ years can achieve $100–$150/TiB/month all-in on very large deployments.
Real-World Scenario: Mid-Size Enterprise 150 TiB Storage Expansion
CapEx Path (Alletra 6000 + Alletra 9000 split): 100 TiB on Alletra 6000 + 50 TiB on Alletra 9000. Alletra 6000: $150K–$200K (with 45% discount). Alletra 9000: $250K–$350K (with 40% discount). Total CapEx: $400K–$550K + first-year PointNext (typically 12–15% of hardware cost): $50K–$80K. Year 1 total: $450K–$630K. Ongoing annual support (PointNext): $40K–$60K/year.
GreenLake Path (150 TiB, 5-year commitment): 100 TiB Alletra 6000 equivalent + 50 TiB Alletra 9000 equivalent. Blended rate negotiated at $150–$200/TiB/month. 150 TiB × $175/TiB/month (midpoint) = $26,250/month or $315K/year. 5-year total: $1.575M. Equivalent CapEx: roughly $400K + $50K annually for 5 years in support.
CapEx wins on 5-year TCO if capacity remains stable. GreenLake wins if you expect 20%+ annual growth, want zero hardware refresh liability, or need month-to-month flexibility (though that's penalized).
HPE Storage Discount Benchmarks — What's Achievable
CapEx Traditional Discounts
Enterprise tier (100+ TiB): 45–50% off list pricing. 40–45% is the expected baseline. Below 40% means weak negotiation or limited competitive alternatives. Alletra 9000 rarely exceeds 50% discount due to tier-1 positioning.
Mid-market (20–100 TiB): 40–45% discount. Competition from competitors (Dell EMC, NetApp, Pure Storage) drives pricing. Negotiation leverage is moderate.
SMB (under 20 TiB): 30–40% discount. List price discipline is stronger. Reseller or vendor-direct purchase channels matter—direct HPE sales teams negotiate better than resellers, counterintuitively.
GreenLake Discounts
Large committed deployment (500+ TiB, 5 years): 30–35% off published list rates. Best-in-market achievers: 35–40%. Published rates are higher than CapEx per-TiB costs, but commitment length and competitive pressure allow significant discounts.
Mid-size (100–500 TiB): 20–30% off list. Expect 25% as a baseline.
Small (under 100 TiB): 10–20% off. GreenLake doesn't discount as aggressively on small footprints—HPE wants scale commitment.
Competitive Positioning Discount
If you benchmark against NetApp StorageGRID, Dell EMC PowerStore, or Pure Storage FlashArray, HPE will typically grant an additional 5–12% discount to prevent customer loss. This is leverage—always get competing bids and present them in negotiations.
PointNext Support Negotiation
PointNext support is often bundled into GreenLake pricing, which is appropriate. For traditional CapEx, it's frequently attached at list rate (12–15% of hardware cost). Push back: negotiate support as a separate line item and aim for 20–30% off PointNext list pricing. Many enterprises successfully negotiate 3-year support at 25% discount, paid upfront.
HPE Storage Pricing by Product Line
| Product | Capacity Range | Use Case | List Price (Entry) | Market Pricing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alletra 4000 | 5–50 TiB | SMB / General purpose | $40K–$60K | $24K–$30K (40–50% off) |
| Alletra 6000 | 20–500 TiB | Mid-range / Virtualization | $80K–$300K | $40K–$150K (45–50% off) |
| Alletra 9000 | 100 TiB+ | Tier-1 / Mission-critical | $300K–$1.2M+ | $150K–$600K (40–50% off) |
| Alletra Storage MP | 50–1000 TiB | Unified block-and-file | $150K–$600K | $80K–$300K (45–50% off) |
| GreenLake Block Storage | 50 TiB+ | Consumption-based (any workload) | $150–$500/TiB/mo | $100–$350/TiB/mo (20–35% off) |
| GreenLake File Storage | 50 TiB+ | Consumption-based file services | $120–$400/TiB/mo | $85–$280/TiB/mo (25–35% off) |
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Submit Your Contract →Common HPE Storage Contract Traps to Watch For
1. GreenLake Committed vs. Consumed Billing Gaps
GreenLake contracts often include a committed capacity that you must pay for, regardless of actual consumption. If you commit to 100 TiB but only use 80 TiB for a year, you still pay for 100 TiB. Buffer capacity (typically 10–20%) adds a soft overage threshold. If you exceed committed + buffer, premium rates apply (often 30–50% surcharge). Always model usage conservatively and negotiate buffer capacity down to 5–10% or eliminate it entirely for predictable workloads.
2. Buffer Capacity Charges
HPE bundles a buffer capacity allowance into most GreenLake contracts. This ranges from 10–20% of committed capacity at no additional charge. Beyond the buffer, you pay premium rates. Negotiate the buffer down or ask for a tiered overage model instead. Some enterprises successfully eliminate buffer entirely by committing to actual projected usage (not padded).
3. PointNext Support Force-Attachment at List Rate
HPE frequently bundles PointNext support into CapEx deals at list rate (12–15% of hardware cost annually). This is often non-negotiable in the contract template, but it's absolutely negotiable in reality. Separate the support line item and push for 20–30% discount. For GreenLake, support is typically included, which is fair value.
4. GreenLake Early Termination Fees
Breaking a GreenLake 5-year contract early can cost 20–30% of the remaining contract value. Some customers face even steeper penalties if minimum capacity commitments haven't been met. Ensure termination provisions are capped at a reasonable percentage (aim for under 15%) and that they only apply to customer breach, not to HPE failures to deliver service levels.
5. Capacity Overage Pricing at Premium Rates
Usage exceeding committed + buffer capacity is typically billed at 130–150% of the base rate. Always audit consumption against commitment quarterly. If you're consistently overshooting committed capacity, renegotiate the commitment upward mid-contract rather than paying premium rates.
6. Software License Costs Separate from Hardware
Alletra 9000 and advanced features (snapshots, replication, encryption) may carry additional software licensing fees above the hardware cost. These are perpetual licenses but renewal support (PointNext) is annual. Get a clear breakdown of hardware, software, and support as separate line items.
7. Renewal Automation Without Competitive Bidding
Many enterprises accidentally auto-renew GreenLake contracts at list-plus-2% increases. Always allow contracts to lapse to renewal period (typically 120 days before expiry) and force a competitive bid. This is your strongest negotiation leverage.
HPE Storage Renewal Pricing: What Changes and What Doesn't
GreenLake Renewal Dynamics
GreenLake renewals differ from initial sales. At renewal, you have real alternatives (you've proven the platform works). HPE knows this and will often offer modest discounts or technology refreshes to retain you. Expect initial renewal offers at 5–10% above expiring pricing. Push back hard—the market will support flat or 3–5% increases for loyal, high-volume customers.
Renewal is also the time to renegotiate capacity commitments if usage patterns have shifted. If you've consistently overshot committed capacity, lock in higher commitment at negotiated rates. If you've underused, reduce commitment to unlock better per-TiB pricing on the new term.
PointNext Support Renewal
PointNext support contracts typically increase 3–5% annually during renewal. Don't accept the first increase—competitive market pressure from Dell ProSupport, NetApp SupportEdge, and Pure's Pure1 will drive discounts. Many enterprises successfully negotiate flat PointNext renewals by bundling extended terms (3–5 years of support paid upfront).
Alletra Hardware Refresh Cycles
Alletra hardware refresh typically occurs every 4–5 years. At refresh, HPE offers technology migration paths: you can trade in older hardware for credits toward newer arrays (Alletra 6000 to Alletra 6000 Gen 2, etc.). Refresh negotiations often unlock additional 8–12% discounts if you commit to the new generation.
Software Continuity at Renewal
Software licenses perpetually owned can carry data protection obligations at renewal. Ensure renewal terms explicitly state that you retain all software features and that performance support is renewed at no additional cost. Some customers have faced surprise "software enhancement fees" at renewal—push back and ensure perpetual licenses stay perpetual.
Competitive Alternatives at Renewal
Renewal is the ideal time to benchmark against NetApp ONTAP pricing and Dell EMC PowerStore pricing. A competitive bid proposal (even a non-binding LOI) will typically unlock 5–15% additional discount. Vendors know they'll lose you otherwise.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is HPE GreenLake more expensive than traditional CapEx over 5 years?
A: Not necessarily. On stable workloads with predictable capacity, CapEx wins on TCO. On growing workloads (20%+ annual growth), GreenLake often saves money because you avoid hardware refresh costs and don't overpay for unused capacity. The real win for GreenLake is operational flexibility and monthly budgeting predictability, not absolute cost.
Q: What happens if we exceed our GreenLake committed capacity?
A: Usage exceeding committed capacity (plus any negotiated buffer) is billed at premium rates—typically 130–150% of the base rate. This is why careful capacity planning matters. If you're consistently in overage, renegotiate the committed capacity upward mid-contract. Many contracts allow annual true-ups.
Q: Can we negotiate HPE storage pricing after we've signed?
A: Yes. Mid-contract renegotiations are common, especially if: (1) usage patterns have changed significantly, (2) you're bundling additional services, (3) you're committing to longer contract terms, or (4) competitive pressure is evident. Annual business reviews often provide informal renegotiation windows.
Q: Should we buy PointNext support separately from hardware?
A: For CapEx purchases, yes. Negotiate PointNext as a separate line item and aim for 20–30% discount. For GreenLake, it's typically bundled, which is fair. Consider evaluating alternative support vendors (Zones, Insight, Softchoice) who may offer better rates than HPE direct.
Q: How do we handle multi-site HPE storage deployments?
A: Multi-site deployments (primary + DR sites) can unlock volume discounts if negotiated as a single deal. Bundle all sites into one contract and aim for 50% or higher discount on total capacity across both sites. GreenLake multi-site deployments often qualify for additional replication service discounts (5–10% off bundled replication pricing).
The Bottom Line: Negotiate or Leave Money on the Table
HPE storage pricing is not transparent, and that's deliberate. Sales teams will quote you list price and hope you don't negotiate. Our data shows the average enterprise overpays by 26% when they don't push back. Armed with these benchmarks, you have the information to change that.
For CapEx (Alletra) deals: Expect 45–50% discounts on enterprise volumes. If you're getting less than 40% off, you're not leveraging competition effectively. Separate PointNext support and negotiate it aggressively.
For GreenLake OpEx: Committed capacity should be priced at $100–$200/TiB/month for large deals (500+ TiB). For mid-market, expect $150–$250/TiB/month. Always get competing bids from NetApp and Dell EMC to maintain pricing pressure.
At renewal: Force a competitive rebid. This single action will unlock 5–15% additional savings that HPE won't volunteer otherwise.
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