VMWARE CORE LICENSING AUDITOR
APPLY THE 16-CORE FLOOR. SURFACE GHOST CORES. CONFIRM VSAN ENTITLEMENT BEFORE RENEWAL.
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The Architectural Reality of Broadcom Licensing
The VMware Core Calculator is the starting point for any defensible Broadcom renewal budget. Before you can model cost, negotiate terms, or evaluate an exit, you need one number: your actual licensed core footprint — not your VM count, not your socket count, but physical cores after the 16-core billing floor is applied across every CPU in your estate. Get that number wrong and everything downstream is wrong too.
In year two of Broadcom’s subscription model, licensing errors are catastrophic. The shift from perpetual CPU sockets to per-core subscriptions for VMware vSphere Foundation (VVF) and VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) introduces financial variables that didn’t exist under the old model — variables that compound at every renewal cycle. The entitlement structure is documented in the Broadcom Product Guide, but the math that determines your actual bill requires applying it against your specific hardware profile.
If you deploy dual 12-core processors, you aren’t paying for 24 cores. You are paying for 32. That four-core gap per CPU — multiplied across every host in your estate — is what the VMware Core Calculator calls ghost cores: licensed capacity that generates cost with no workload behind it. In a 10-host cluster with dual-socket 12-core CPUs, that’s 80 ghost cores on the invoice before a single VM is counted.
To surface these costs before renewal, we built the VMware Core Calculator. This architectural decision engine applies the mandatory 16-core billing floor programmatically, maps your vSAN storage against the current VVF and VCF entitlement ratios, and surfaces add-on exposure instantly — so your renewal estimate reflects the environment Broadcom is actually licensing, not the one your last spreadsheet modelled.

The VMware Core Calculator is Step 1. Once your licensed core count and vSAN entitlement exposure are confirmed, the VMware Licensing Cost Model takes that footprint and projects it across a three-year renewal horizon — Low, Mid, and High range — with renewal escalation and cost delta vs legacy licensing built in.
What This Calculator Surfaces
FoundationCoreAndTiBUsage PowerCLI audit outputs — calculator result and PowerCLI pull tell the same story before the renewal conversation starts.VMware Core Calculator: Key Features
- The Mandatory 16-Core Floor: Automatically rounds up CPUs with fewer than 16 physical cores to enforce Broadcom’s billing policy — and surfaces the ghost core count so you can see exactly what you’re paying for that delivers no workload value.
- Current vSAN Entitlement Mapping: Uses the latest entitlement ratios per the vSphere 8.0U3e release notes — VVF at 0.25 TiB per core, VCF at 1 TiB per core — updated from the previous 100 GiB VVF entitlement in November 2024.
- Audit-Ready Output: Generates a licensing summary that maps directly to your
FoundationCoreAndTiBUsagePowerCLI audit outputs — so your calculator result and your PowerCLI pull tell the same story before the renewal conversation starts. - Ghost Core Visibility: Surfaces the gap between your physical core count and the 16-core billing floor — the hidden cost that turns a 12-core CPU into a 16-core invoice line at every host in the estate.
THE CALCULATOR SURFACES THE COST.
THE ASSESSMENT SURFACES THE BLOCKERS.
Your licensed core count is one number. What your environment is actually ready to do with it — renew, optimize, or exit — requires a second audit. The Migration Readiness Assessment runs locally in your vSphere environment and returns a scored readiness report across five domains within two business days.
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>_ Architectural Guidance
VMware Migration Readiness AssessmentDetermine whether your VMware environment is operationally ready for migration before investing in tooling, discovery, or cutover planning.
Delivered within 2 business days. No credentials required. No vCenter access granted. >_ Run the Readiness Assessment |
>_ The Dispatch
Architecture Playbooks. Field-Tested Blueprints.Broadcom renewal decision frameworks, VMware exit architecture, and post-migration Day 2 operations — built from production environments, not vendor documentation.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Why did my vSAN entitlement increase in the calculator?
A: As of November 2024 (and reflected in vSphere 8.0U3e), Broadcom increased the VVF entitlement from 100 GiB to 250 GiB (0.25 TiB) per core. We have updated the tool to ensure your 2026 renewal estimates are accurate. See the official vSphere 8.0U3e release notes for the entitlement change documentation.
Q: Why does the calculator use 1 TiB for VCF instead of 2 TiB?
A: While legacy 2025 ‘Cloud’ promotional bundles offered 2 TiB, the Broadcom Standard Product Guide remains anchored at 1 TiB per core for VCF as of 2026. We utilize this baseline to ensure designs are built on verified, long-term entitlements rather than expiring promos.
Q: Does this account for the 72-core minimum order?
A: No. The rumored 72-core minimum from early 2025 was largely superseded by the standard 16-core per CPU floor. This tool focuses on that 16-core floor, which remains the primary driver of ‘ghost cost’ for modern high-density compute nodes.
Q: How do I calculate the “Metadata Tax” for my backup repository?
A: This calculator focuses on VMware Licensing entitlements. For technical storage sizing (including Veeam block-size multipliers and XFS/ReFS metadata overhead), please refer to our dedicated Veeam Immutable Storage Calculator.
Q: What is the difference between physical cores and licensed cores?
A: Physical cores are what your hardware contains. Licensed cores are what Broadcom charges for — your physical core count rounded up to the 16-core minimum per CPU. A 12-core CPU is licensed as 16 cores. The gap between those two numbers is your ghost core count. Every renewal budget should be built against licensed cores, not physical cores — the calculator outputs the licensed count automatically.
Q: Does this work for environments with mixed CPU generations or different core counts per host?
A: Yes. Run the calculator once per CPU profile and sum the licensed core totals manually. The 16-core floor applies per CPU independently — a cluster mixing 12-core and 16-core processors produces different ghost core exposures per host type and must be calculated separately to get an accurate estate-wide footprint.
