Microsoft funds a significant portion of eligible Azure migration and modernization projects. Most organizations never claim it.
Azure Accelerate, Microsoft's unified cloud investment program, provides partner-delivered funding, Azure credits, and zero-cost deployment support for organizations moving workloads to Azure. It's one of the most direct cost reduction levers available for cloud migration, and it remains consistently underused, largely because accessing it requires a qualified Microsoft partner, and most vendors don't surface it early enough to matter.
If your organization is running on aging on-premises infrastructure, co-location, or a legacy hosting arrangement, this program deserves serious attention before your next renewal cycle.
Launched in mid-2025, Azure Accelerate consolidated three prior Microsoft programs, Azure Migrate and Modernize, Azure Innovate, and Cloud Accelerate Factory, into a single end-to-end offering with broader workload coverage and more flexible funding.
According to the official Azure Accelerate program page, the program delivers three core benefits:
Covered scenarios include Windows Server, SQL Server, Linux, Oracle, VMware via Azure VMware Solution, SAP workloads, application modernization, Microsoft Fabric and Azure Databricks data migrations, and AI application development. There is no cap on investment for larger engagements.
This is not a rebate paid after the fact. Funding is structured to reduce actual project costs before and during execution.
Azure Accelerate funding flows through Microsoft's specialized partner ecosystem. A qualified partner nominates eligible engagements on your behalf. The key customer-side factors are:
There is no application process for the end customer. The partner manages the nomination. The most commonly missed gate is partner qualification: only partners holding active Azure Solutions Partner designations or Advanced Specializations can submit nominations. Organizations buying directly from Microsoft or working with generalist IT vendors cannot access this program on their own.
The clearest way to understand Azure Accelerate's value is to run a side-by-side comparison.
Consider a mid-market organization running 40 virtual machines in a co-location environment, paying roughly $480,000 annually in hosting, maintenance, and infrastructure management costs. Without any funding, migration professional services, covering assessment, a proof-of-value pilot, and full deployment, typically run $95,000 to $190,000 before a single workload goes live.
With Azure Accelerate applied, a qualified partner can offset a significant portion of those costs across all three phases. Azure credits reduce consumption during migration. In most mid-market engagements, the effective out-of-pocket cost for professional services drops by 40–60%, depending on workload type and engagement size.
The Forrester Total Economic Impact study on Azure cost efficiency solutions found that organizations consistently underestimate migration cost exposure and overestimate the break-even timeline, partly because they don't account for available funding offsets during planning. When modeled correctly, a funded migration often shows a payback period 12 months shorter than the same project without funding applied.
This is where most organizations leave value behind. Azure Accelerate funding is tied to active partner nominations and Microsoft's fiscal year structure, which means timing directly affects what's available to you.
Two scenarios consistently reduce leverage:
The ideal sequencing:
CloudServus regularly runs this analysis as part of our Azure cost optimization engagements. For clients approaching infrastructure renewals, a proper TCO model against a funded migration scenario often changes the board-level conversation entirely.
Organizations that delay until a hardware refresh is overdue, or until a co-location contract has auto-renewed, lose negotiating position on three fronts at once: with their current vendor, with Microsoft, and on internal budget timing. Compressed timelines also increase execution risk, leaving less room for proper landing zone design, security baseline configuration, and governance setup before workloads migrate.
If you're running Windows Server 2016 or earlier, SQL Server 2014 or earlier, or VMware environments facing Broadcom licensing changes, the window to plan a funded migration is narrowing. Extended security updates are available on Azure, but Accelerate funding for those migrations depends on initiating the engagement while the workloads are still in scope. For a practical look at how migration sequencing affects long-term Azure spend, the CloudServus cloud migration optimization playbook is a useful reference.
Not all Microsoft partners can access Azure Accelerate. The program requires specific Solutions Partner designations, and the partner's ability to nominate engagements, manage approvals, and execute migrations at a standard that satisfies Microsoft's quality requirements is what determines whether funding materializes.
CloudServus holds the Azure Expert MSP certification, placing us among the top tier of Microsoft's global partner ecosystem. That status is directly relevant here: it means we can nominate your project, manage the funding process, and deliver the migration with the technical depth the program demands.
If you're evaluating a data center exit, infrastructure refresh, or cloud migration in the next 12 months, the first conversation should be about what Microsoft will fund. Start that conversation here.