Unitrends was built to solve one problem: give a mid-market IT team an all-in-one backup appliance that does not require the complexity of Commvault or the per-feature licensing gymnastics of Veeam. That positioning is still the reason most Unitrends customers signed in the first place. What has changed since Kaseya's acquisition is the pricing discipline around renewals, the bundling pressure across the broader Kaseya IT Complete stack, and the willingness of Unitrends sales to concede meaningful discounts when a competitive quote shows up on the table.
This benchmark page is written from the perspective of the buyer, not the seller. It pulls from our database of 40+ Unitrends contracts signed in the last 24 months — a mix of Recovery Series hardware refreshes, Unitrends Backup software (UB) renewals, Forever Cloud long-term archive agreements, and new competitive displacements from Veeam and Barracuda Backup. For the broader category context, start with our Storage, Backup & Infrastructure Pricing Guide. For direct alternatives, see our breakdowns of Veeam Backup & Replication pricing, Commvault Complete pricing, and Rubrik pricing.
One theme shows up in almost every Unitrends deal we benchmark: the initial quote is designed to anchor the customer on a three-year appliance-plus-software-plus-cloud bundle at list price, and the real negotiation only starts when the customer pushes back hard on specific line items. Customers who accept the first proposal without that friction consistently leave 12–18 points of discount on the table.
Quick Facts: Unitrends Backup
Unitrends Pricing Model Explained
Unitrends sells three priced components that almost always travel together in an enterprise deal. Understanding each one independently is the first step toward a defensible benchmark.
The first component is Recovery Series hardware appliances, which are priced by usable capacity. The current Recovery Series lineup covers roughly 2 TB at the low end to 120+ TB at the high end, with specific models (Recovery 713, 823, 933, 943, 953, 9xxx-series) carving the capacity curve into discrete steps. Appliance pricing includes a year of hardware support plus a bundled software entitlement. The list price per usable TB drops as appliance size increases — meaning Unitrends has an incentive to quote you the next tier up, because it makes the per-TB math look better while increasing absolute revenue.
The second component is Unitrends Backup (UB) software, which is licensed by sockets for VMware and Hyper-V environments and by protected capacity for physical or cloud-only environments. The software entitlement bundled with a Recovery Series appliance has a capped footprint; exceeding it triggers additional socket or capacity licenses at list price unless you negotiated bundle terms up front.
The third component is Forever Cloud, Unitrends' long-term retention cloud archive. Forever Cloud is priced per TB of cloud-retained data with retention tier modifiers. Long-retention tiers (7-year, 10-year) carry a premium per TB, and Forever Cloud contracts frequently contain quiet escalation language that walks the per-TB price up year over year even as your retained data grows. This is the single most common source of surprise renewal cost in our Unitrends benchmark data.
Since the Kaseya acquisition, a fourth pricing layer has started to appear: Kaseya IT Complete bundles, which wrap Unitrends with Datto, Spanning, VSA, and other Kaseya-owned products at a nominal "bundle discount." These bundles look attractive on paper but frequently lock customers into multi-product renewal cycles that are harder to unwind than a standalone Unitrends contract.
What Enterprises Actually Pay for Unitrends
The table below reflects blended three-year TCO (hardware plus software plus Forever Cloud plus support) for representative Unitrends deployments we have benchmarked. Ranges represent the spread between initial quotes and negotiated outcomes.
| Deployment Size | Protected Data | Initial 3-Yr Quote | Negotiated 3-Yr | Discount |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SMB / Branch Office | 5–15 TB | $45K–$90K | $34K–$65K | 22–28% |
| Mid-Market (Single Site) | 20–60 TB | $110K–$240K | $78K–$168K | 28–34% |
| Mid-Market (Multi-Site + Cloud Archive) | 60–150 TB | $260K–$520K | $175K–$345K | 30–38% |
| Larger Enterprise (Competitive Displacement) | 150 TB+ | $560K+ | $325K+ | 35–42% |
Two numbers deserve special attention. The Forever Cloud line item is typically 18–28% of three-year TCO, but its cost-per-TB drops meaningfully when the customer introduces Veeam Cloud Connect, Wasabi, or Backblaze as an alternative archive destination. That threat is credible because Unitrends supports third-party S3 targets. Many customers never price the alternative and therefore never capture the discount pressure it creates.
Overpaying for Unitrends?
Upload your Unitrends quote, renewal, or Forever Cloud agreement and get a full pricing benchmark against 40+ comparable deals within 24 hours. See exactly where each line item sits versus market.
Submit Your Contract →Unitrends Discount Benchmarks — What's Achievable?
Discount ceilings on Unitrends are set less by list price and more by three negotiation mechanics: competitive pressure, term length, and bundle shape. Customers who operate all three levers in parallel consistently outperform those who pull only one.
First, competitive pressure. An active Veeam or Commvault quote on the table moves Unitrends discounts materially. Our data shows customers with a documented competitive proposal achieve 8–12 percentage points more discount than those who negotiate on internal budget constraints alone. Barracuda Backup is another effective foil for smaller deployments — it plays in the same all-in-one appliance positioning and forces Unitrends to defend its differentiation on price.
Second, term length. Three-year prepaid commitments carry a 6–10 point discount premium over one-year terms. Five-year terms, where available, can add another 3–5 points but introduce meaningful renewal-risk asymmetry — if Unitrends product strategy shifts (and under Kaseya, it has shifted more than once), a five-year term is harder to escape gracefully than a three-year term.
Third, bundle shape. Unitrends sales reps are measured on total contract value, not per-line margin. That means you can often move discount from a low-margin line (hardware) to a high-margin line (Forever Cloud) without changing the rep's incentive to close. Customers who explicitly negotiate a blended discount across the full stack — rather than accepting different discount percentages on each line item — typically end up 4–6 points ahead of the quoted blend.
Unitrends Pricing by Product Line
Recovery Series Appliances
Recovery Series hardware is where Unitrends started and where the brand's all-in-one positioning still lives. List pricing per usable TB ranges from roughly $1,400 at the high end of the appliance curve to $3,200+ at the small end. Negotiated pricing typically lands 20–30% below list. Appliance pricing also tends to include a first year of hardware support; watch for support renewal terms on years two and three that escalate faster than the software line.
Unitrends Backup Software (UB)
UB software pricing is structured around sockets for virtualized workloads and protected capacity for physical or cloud-only workloads. Per-socket list pricing sits in the $1,200–$1,900 range for a perpetual license with first-year maintenance included, and subscription-equivalent socket pricing typically runs $650–$950 per year. Our data shows that customers who benchmark the socket count against actual protected VMs — rather than accepting a "safety margin" from the initial quote — save on average $14K–$38K annually on mid-market deployments.
Forever Cloud Long-Term Retention
Forever Cloud is priced per TB of retained cloud data with retention-tier modifiers. Standard-retention pricing starts around $85–$140 per TB per month; 7- and 10-year retention tiers carry premiums of 25–60% over standard. The most important contract detail is the escalation language: many Forever Cloud agreements include a quiet 5–8% annual per-TB price increase that compounds on top of data growth, producing renewal bills 40–60% higher than Year 1 without any change in retention strategy.
Unitrends MSP Edition and Kaseya IT Complete
For managed service providers, Unitrends is available through the Kaseya IT Complete bundle at MSP-specific pricing that is not directly comparable to enterprise quotes. Enterprise buyers should be alert to quotes that include Kaseya cross-sell items (Datto, Spanning, VSA) as "bonus" entitlements — these items carry their own renewal cycles and can dramatically expand the contract surface at year three.
Is Your Forever Cloud Escalation Clause Running the Meter?
Forever Cloud contracts frequently escalate 5–8% annually on top of data growth. We review your retention tier, pricing floor, and escalation language and quantify how much those clauses are costing you.
Get Forever Cloud Analysis →Common Unitrends Contract Traps to Watch For
Auto-Renewal with 60–90 Day Cancellation Windows
Most Unitrends enterprise contracts include auto-renewal clauses with a 60- or 90-day notice window. Miss the window and you are locked into another multi-year term at whatever escalation the contract specifies. Calendar the exact notice date on signing, not the renewal date — and negotiate a longer cancellation window or explicit opt-in renewal if you can.
Forever Cloud Escalation Compounding on Data Growth
Forever Cloud per-TB pricing frequently escalates 5–8% annually, and that escalation compounds on top of organic data growth. The result: a three-year-old Forever Cloud commitment can cost 50–70% more in Year 3 than Year 1 for the same retention policy. Push for capped annual escalation (CPI or 3% maximum) and a pricing floor review every 12 months.
Recovery Series Refresh Timed to Renewal
Unitrends sales motion often ties a Recovery Series hardware refresh to a software renewal, creating a combined capital-and-operating budget hit at exactly the moment the customer has the least negotiating leverage. Decouple the hardware refresh decision from the software renewal — benchmark them separately, and keep hardware refresh as a competitive event you can time independently.
Kaseya Cross-Sell Expanding the Contract Surface
Since the Kaseya acquisition, Unitrends proposals increasingly include Datto, Spanning, or VSA entitlements positioned as "included value." Each of these products carries its own renewal cycle and its own pricing dynamics. Accepting them in a Unitrends proposal can create a Year 3 renewal that looks nothing like the Year 1 contract. Strip them out unless you actively need them, and never let them anchor a total contract value you cannot unwind.
Socket Safety Margin vs. Actual VM Count
Initial UB software quotes often include a "safety margin" of 15–25% over current VM socket count. That margin is almost always unused and represents $14K–$38K in unnecessary annual cost for a mid-market deployment. Benchmark socket count against actual protected VMs and right-size before signing.
Unitrends Renewal Pricing: What Changes and What Doesn't
Renewal is where Unitrends pricing has become meaningfully more disciplined since the Kaseya acquisition. Three patterns show up consistently in our renewal benchmark data.
The first pattern is a default 7–12% annual uplift baked into automated renewals. Customers who take no action at renewal see roughly a 7% increase if they are on a standard renewal track and 10–12% if they are on a "legacy" contract that Kaseya is actively repricing to the current list book. This uplift is negotiable, but only if the customer engages before the 60- or 90-day notice window closes. After the window, the uplift is effectively locked.
The second pattern is Forever Cloud escalation compounding on top of data growth, covered in the traps section above. This is the single largest renewal-cost surprise in our Unitrends benchmark dataset, and it is fully avoidable with contract language negotiated at signing.
The third pattern is Recovery Series refresh pressure. Unitrends sales motion will often make a hardware refresh the anchor of the renewal conversation — "your appliance is end-of-life, here is a new one with a better support tier, and here is the new software bundle that goes with it." This framing reshapes the renewal around hardware economics rather than software value. Customers who separate the hardware refresh from the software renewal — and run each as an independent benchmark event — consistently achieve 10–15 percentage points more total discount than customers who allow the two to be merged.
The optimal Unitrends renewal strategy starts 90 days before the notice window. Step one: obtain a competitive quote from at least one alternative vendor (Veeam, Commvault, Rubrik, or Barracuda, depending on deployment scale). Step two: benchmark the current contract against our dataset — covered by our free proposal benchmark service. Step three: present Unitrends with specific, line-item pricing expectations and an alternative path. Three-quarters of the customers who follow this process achieve renewal discounts within two percentage points of their best new-purchase outcome.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is Unitrends Backup priced?
Unitrends uses a blended model: Recovery Series hardware priced by usable TB, Unitrends Backup software priced by sockets or protected capacity, and Forever Cloud priced per TB of cloud-retained data with retention tier modifiers. Enterprise deals almost always combine all three. Since the Kaseya acquisition, broader IT Complete bundles have added a fourth priced layer that can expand the contract surface substantially.
What discount can I negotiate on Unitrends?
22–38% off initial quotes is standard for 3-year enterprise commitments, with 40%+ achievable when a competitive Veeam or Commvault quote is on the table. Customers who accept the first proposal typically leave 12–18 points on the table.
Is Unitrends cheaper than Veeam or Commvault?
For all-in-one appliance deployments in mid-market environments, Unitrends typically comes in 15–30% below a Veeam-plus-hardware stack and 25–45% below Commvault Complete at list price. The gap narrows at larger scale because Unitrends scales less cleanly than Commvault or Rubrik. Always benchmark full three-year TCO, not list price.
What happened to Unitrends pricing after the Kaseya acquisition?
Pricing trended toward subscription bundling with Kaseya IT Complete, renewal discipline tightened, cross-sell of Datto and Spanning became more aggressive, and automated renewals with 60–90 day cancellation windows became standard. Headline discounts are still achievable — but contract language matters more than it used to.
What are the main Unitrends contract traps?
Auto-renewal clauses with tight cancellation windows, Forever Cloud escalation compounding on data growth, Recovery Series refresh timed to renewal, Kaseya cross-sell quietly expanding contract surface, and socket safety margins that never get used. Benchmark the full stack before renewal and the surprises disappear.