Real Nutanix enterprise contract data. What organizations migrating from VMware actually pay for NCP — software licensing, hardware through OEM partners, migration costs, and the discount benchmarks that matter when Nutanix is competing for your VMware displacement deal.
Nutanix Cloud Platform (NCP) is a hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI) solution that bundles compute, storage, and networking software into a single subscription. Unlike VMware, where you historically purchased separate licenses for vSphere, vSAN, and NSX, Nutanix sells NCP as an all-in-one software stack running on certified hardware from Dell, HPE, Lenovo, or Nutanix-branded NX appliances.
NCP is available in three software editions: Starter, Pro, and Ultimate. Starter covers base AOS (storage and hyperconverged OS) and AHV (the included hypervisor). Pro adds Prism Central Pro (advanced management), Flow Networking (micro-segmentation and network policies), and Files (scale-out NAS). Ultimate adds all Pro features plus Nutanix Kubernetes Engine (NKE), Security Central, and Data Lens for governance. Most enterprise customers land on Pro or Ultimate depending on their Kubernetes and security requirements.
The Nutanix pricing model differs from VMware in an important way: the AHV hypervisor is included at no additional cost. This eliminates the VMware vSphere license cost that was a significant component of total virtualization spend. Nutanix's argument to VMware shops is that you replace vSphere with AHV (free), vSAN with Nutanix AOS storage (included in NCP), and vCenter/NSX with Prism Central and Flow (included in Pro) — at a total per-core cost below what VCF charges for the same bundle. For the full context on cloud infrastructure pricing, including all major HCI and virtualization vendors, see our category benchmark guide.
Nutanix pricing has evolved significantly since the company's early days of hardware-plus-software bundle pricing. Today, NCP software licensing is sold separately from hardware, which improves transparency and simplifies competitive comparisons with VMware.
NCP Pro software licensing runs $70–$130 per core per year at enterprise volumes before discounting. For a 500-core environment (approximately 30–40 modern dual-socket servers with 14–16 cores each), software licensing costs $35,000–$65,000 annually before discounts — dramatically lower than what VCF would cost for the same environment. For a 5,000-core environment, software licensing runs $350,000–$650,000 annually before the significant volume discounts Nutanix provides at this scale.
Hardware costs are separate and significant. Nutanix NX appliances (Nutanix-branded hardware) carry a premium over equivalent Dell or HPE hardware. Most enterprises purchase Nutanix NCP software licenses separately and run on preferred hardware vendors (Dell PowerEdge, HPE ProLiant). This separability is a meaningful negotiating tool: you can create hardware competition independently of the software license negotiation.
Total three-year cost of ownership for a 5,000-core Nutanix environment (software + hardware amortization + support) typically runs $3M–$6M in our benchmark database. The equivalent VMware Cloud Foundation environment on the same hardware scale runs $5M–$10M+ at current Broadcom pricing. The Nutanix economics become more favorable as the VMware comparison baseline rises — which is exactly what Broadcom's pricing strategy has done for Nutanix.
Nutanix is most aggressive on pricing for VMware displacement deals — this is the company's strategic priority in 2026 and their sales compensation reflects it. If you have a Broadcom VCF renewal proposal in hand and are evaluating Nutanix as a genuine alternative, you are in the strongest negotiating position. Nutanix's enterprise sales team has significant discount authority specifically for VMware displacement deals and can move fast when the alternative is losing to VCF renewal inertia.
Submit your Nutanix proposal alongside your VMware renewal and we will produce a side-by-side benchmark with comparable enterprises — including 3-year TCO comparison and the specific Nutanix discount levels achievable for your environment size.
Submit Your Nutanix Proposal →The most effective way to frame a Nutanix versus VMware Cloud Foundation decision is on three-year total cost of ownership rather than annual software licensing cost, because migration cost and hardware refresh timing significantly affect the economics.
For a 3,000-core enterprise environment on a hardware refresh cycle (new hardware needed regardless of software choice), the three-year comparison typically looks as follows: VMware Cloud Foundation on new hardware runs $3.2M–$6M in software costs over three years at current Broadcom pricing. Nutanix NCP Pro on equivalent new hardware from Dell or HPE runs $1.5M–$3M in software costs plus $150,000–$400,000 in migration services and a modest productivity dip during migration. Net three-year advantage for Nutanix: $1.2M–$3.5M depending on environment specifics and negotiated discounts.
For environments not due for hardware refresh, the migration calculation changes: you need to factor in the cost of purchasing new Nutanix-certified hardware before your existing VMware hardware fully deprecates. In these cases, the three-year Nutanix advantage narrows or may be slightly negative in year one, with the savings accruing in years two and three as hardware depreciation catches up. See our benchmark on VMware Cloud pricing post-Broadcom for the full VCF comparison picture.
Our benchmark database includes 180+ Nutanix enterprise contracts. Submit your proposal and we will provide a full pricing benchmark — including VMware side-by-side comparison and the specific discount levels Nutanix achieves for comparable environments.
Submit Your Nutanix Proposal →NCP software licensing runs $70–$130 per core per year for Pro/Ultimate editions before enterprise discounts. A 3,000-core environment pays $210K–$390K annually in software licenses, with VMware displacement discounts bringing this to $95K–$230K. Hardware is purchased separately through Dell, HPE, or Lenovo. Total three-year TCO for a 3,000-core environment (software + hardware) runs $2M–$4.5M.
For most enterprises, Nutanix NCP is 20–50% cheaper than VCF on a three-year TCO basis. Migration costs partially offset the savings in year one. Enterprises comparing Nutanix to VCF consistently report 30–50% lower three-year total costs. The advantage grows as the VCF comparison baseline rises under Broadcom's pricing strategy.
VMware displacement deals achieve 40–55% discounts on NCP. New greenfield deployments see 25–35%. Nutanix is aggressively pursuing VMware market share and discounts generously for displacement deals — this is their #1 sales priority in 2026. Bring your VCF renewal proposal to Nutanix negotiations; it is the single most effective pricing lever.
Migrations using Nutanix Move take 3–12 months. Simple environments (under 500 VMs, standard workloads) migrate in 3–4 months. Complex environments with legacy apps, Oracle databases, or custom network configurations take 9–18 months. Nutanix provides migration resources for large deals; factor professional services cost into your TCO comparison.
NCP bundles AOS (HCI storage), AHV hypervisor (free — no vSphere license needed), Prism Central Pro (management), Flow Networking (micro-segmentation), and Files/Objects (storage services). DRaaS, Kubernetes Engine, and database automation (Era) are add-ons priced separately. Most enterprise use cases are covered by NCP Pro without add-ons.
Our benchmark database covers 180+ Nutanix enterprise contracts. Submit your proposal and we will provide a full pricing benchmark including VMware side-by-side comparison within 24 hours.