Oracle does not give away cloud credits — it lends them against your next three renewals. This Oracle OCI migration incentive true cost study models what the migration credits, Annual Universal Credits commitments, and Support Rewards actually cost over three years once discount-floor repricing, minimum-commitment overshoot, unburned-credit expiry, and lock-in are netted out. The headline is uncomfortable: 61% of enterprises that accept the package pay more within three years.
Short answer: Accepting Oracle's OCI migration incentives leaves 61% of enterprises paying more within three years, with an average net three-year cost increase of 23% above the pre-incentive run-rate, and every $1 of headline OCI credit returns a median $0.54 of effective value after repricing, commitment overshoot, and expiry (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026).
Methodology note: Illustrative aggregated advisory benchmark based on Oracle Licensing Experts engagement experience across 600+ enterprise Oracle cloud and licensing reviews, published Oracle Universal Credits price lists, and OCI ordering documents seen in advisory work; not client-identifying. Not affiliated with Oracle Corporation.
Short answer: Accepting Oracle's OCI migration incentives leaves 61% of enterprises paying more within three years than a like-for-like baseline, with an average net three-year cost increase of 23% above the pre-incentive run-rate (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026). The credits front-load value and back-load a recurring, repriced bill, so the package that looks free in year one is the most expensive line by year three.
Oracle's cloud sales motion has one consistent opening: a number large enough to make the migration look free. Oracle OCI migration incentives are the package of one-off migration credits, discounted Annual Universal Credits, and Oracle Support Rewards that Oracle offers to move on-premises Oracle workloads onto Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. The pitch is framed as a gift — Oracle "funds" your migration, "rewards" your loyalty, and "cuts" your support bill. The structure underneath tells a different story. Migration credits are a one-time grant that expires; the Annual Universal Credits commitment is a multi-year obligation sized by Oracle's deal desk; and the discount floor that makes year one attractive resets at renewal, after the workloads have moved and the leverage has shifted to Oracle.
An OCI migration credit is a one-off allocation of Oracle Cloud Infrastructure consumption credits Oracle grants to offset the cost of migrating a workload onto OCI; it is time-boxed and disappears once consumed or expired. It is the bait, not the meal. The recurring obligation is the Annual Universal Credits commitment, and the recurring cost is the repriced consumption that continues long after the migration credit is gone. When we rebuild the full three-year cash position of an accepted incentive package and set it against the baseline the buyer would have paid by staying on-premises with a capped support uplift — the discipline documented in our companion Oracle support renewal uplift tracker — the gift turns into a premium for a clear majority of enterprises.
Illustrative aggregate. Net three-year delta on a representative $4.0M annual Oracle run-rate after migration credits, Support Rewards, and unburned-credit expiry. Source: Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026.
The table below carries a representative $4.0M annual Oracle run-rate across three years under both paths. The accepted-incentive path looks cheaper in year one because the migration credit absorbs part of the consumption and Support Rewards trims the residual support bill. By year three the migration credit is exhausted, the Support Rewards offset has shrunk against a falling support base, and the discount floor has reset upward — so the effective annual run-rate has climbed above where it started. The cumulative figure is what matters, and on this base it is $3.0M higher than holding the line.
| Cost element | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | 3-yr total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hold baseline (on-prem + capped support) | $4.00M | $4.24M | $4.49M | $12.73M |
| Accept — OCI consumption (committed) | $5.00M | $5.00M | $5.40M | $15.40M |
| Accept — migration credit applied | −$1.50M | $0 | $0 | −$1.50M |
| Accept — Support Rewards offset | −$0.45M | −$0.40M | −$0.34M | −$1.19M |
| Accept — residual on-prem support kept | $1.10M | $0.95M | $0.90M | $2.95M |
| Accept — net annual cost | $4.15M | $5.55M | $5.96M | $15.66M |
| Net delta vs baseline | +$0.15M | +$1.31M | +$1.47M | +$2.93M (+23%) |
Read the year-by-year delta and the mechanism is unmissable: year one is roughly neutral — that is the point of the incentive — and then the cost steps up sharply as the one-off sweeteners burn off and the committed, repriced consumption stands exposed. The buyer who only models year one signs a deal that is genuinely close to free in the first twelve months and 23% more expensive across the term. This is not an accident of execution; it is the design. The rest of this study takes each component apart — the credit leakage, the burn-down, the Support Rewards cap, and the year-three repricing — and shows where the 46 cents of every credit dollar goes.
Oracle's OCI migration incentives are the most effective customer-acquisition tool the company has built since the Unlimited License Agreement, and for the same reason: they convert a future commercial dependency into a present-tense gift. The headline numbers are large, immediate, and easy to approve. The cost is recurring, deferred, and structurally hard to see at signing. This study reconstructs the full three-year economics of accepting the package and finds that for 61% of enterprises the net result is higher Oracle spend, not lower — an average of 23% above the pre-incentive run-rate over three years.
Three mechanisms drive the gap. First, credit leakage: a median 46% of every headline migration-credit dollar evaporates through discount-floor repricing, minimum-commitment overshoot, and the expiry of unburned Universal Credits, so $1 of advertised credit is worth about $0.54 in realised value. Second, the burn-down problem: Oracle ties the discount floor to commit size, which pushes the deal desk to size the Annual Universal Credits commitment above realistic consumption, and a median 22% of committed credits expires unused each year. Third, the year-three repricing: once migration credits are gone and workloads are migrated, the discount floor resets and the effective rate climbs a median 34% for buyers with no exit leverage.
The picture is not uniformly negative, and that nuance matters. A disciplined buyer who treats the incentive as a discount on planned OCI consumption — rather than a reason to commit to OCI they do not need — can come out ahead, with the best-prepared cohort in our base achieving a net three-year saving. The difference between the cohorts is preparation, not luck: right-sized commitments, a workload-by-workload migration plan, a Support Rewards model that respects the eligibility cap, and above all a credible walk-away position held in reserve for the year-three renewal. The recommendations section sets out the sequence. The blunt takeaway for any CIO weighing an OCI incentive is that the number on the table is not the saving; the three-year net position is, and Oracle has every reason to keep those two figures from ever appearing on the same page.
It also matters who inside the buyer's organisation owns the decision. OCI incentives are most dangerous when they are approved by the people who feel the year-one benefit and escape the people who carry the year-three cost — when a migration team books the credit as project funding while procurement never models the renewal, or when a cloud-transformation mandate rewards the act of moving rather than the cost of staying moved. The instrument is built to be approved on a single quarter's optics, and it usually is. The defence is to force the full-term view into the approval itself: no OCI incentive should clear an investment committee without the three-year net delta, the burn-down exposure, and the year-three repricing scenario sitting on the same page as the headline credit, signed off by whoever will own the renewal. That single governance rule moves more buyers out of the 61% than any negotiation tactic, because it removes the information asymmetry the incentive depends on.
Short answer: This benchmark aggregates Oracle Licensing Experts engagement experience across 600+ enterprise Oracle cloud and licensing reviews conducted through 2024–2026, cross-referenced with published Oracle Universal Credits and PaaS/IaaS price lists and the OCI ordering documents seen in advisory work. All figures are illustrative aggregates, not client-identifying (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026).
The sample spans organisations that received and evaluated an Oracle OCI migration-incentive package between calendar 2023 and the first half of 2026, weighted toward enterprises with an annual Oracle estate value above $1M, because that is the threshold at which Oracle deploys migration credits, discounted Annual Universal Credits, and Support Rewards as a combined motion. The set includes both incentives that were accepted and ones that were declined or renegotiated, which is what allows the study to compare realised three-year outcomes against the pre-incentive baseline rather than against Oracle's projected savings.
For each engagement we reconstructed the cash position under two paths: the accepted incentive (committed OCI consumption, migration credit applied, Support Rewards realised against eligible support, and the residual on-premises support retained) and the counterfactual baseline (the workload held on-premises or under existing licences with a negotiated, capped support uplift). Effective rates were derived from ordering-document discount floors against the prevailing OCI price list, not from headline percentages. Burn-down was measured as committed Annual Universal Credits dollars against actual consumed dollars at term end. All currency figures are expressed in US dollars and rounded; the representative $4.0M run-rate used in worked examples is a modelling device chosen to make the segment multipliers legible, not the mean of the sample.
Every headline figure in this report is branded as an "Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark (2026)" and should be read as an aggregated advisory benchmark, not a statistical census. The numbers are anonymised, contain no client-identifying detail, and are intended to give enterprise buyers a defensible reference point for what an OCI incentive actually costs over its full term. Oracle Licensing Experts is independent and not affiliated with Oracle Corporation; this report is benchmarking and licensing guidance, not legal or accounting advice.
Before you sign, we rebuild the full three-year cash position, right-size the commitment, and model the year-three repricing — buyer-side, no Oracle or hyperscaler affiliation. See how Cloud & OCI advisory works →
Short answer: Every $1 of headline OCI migration credit returns a median $0.54 of effective value — a 46% leakage — once discount-floor repricing (−$0.18), minimum-commitment overshoot (−$0.16), and unburned-credit expiry (−$0.12) are netted out (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026). The advertised credit and the realised benefit are two different numbers, and Oracle only ever quotes the first.
The single most misleading figure in any OCI proposal is the headline credit. It is presented as money — "$1.5M of migration credits" — but it is not money; it is a draw-down allowance against Oracle Cloud consumption priced under terms Oracle controls. Three deductions separate the advertised dollar from the realised one. The first is discount-floor repricing: a discount floor is the minimum percentage discount off OCI list that Oracle contractually guarantees for the commitment term, and the headline credit is denominated against a list price that is frequently above the rate a disciplined buyer could negotiate, so part of the "credit" simply funds an inflated base. The second is minimum-commitment overshoot: the credit is bundled with a commitment larger than the buyer needs. The third is unburned-credit expiry: credits that go unused at term end vanish.
Illustrative aggregate. Median realised value per $1 of headline migration credit. Source: Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026.
The table puts numbers on each deduction and shows how they compound. Note that the deductions are not independent failures — they reinforce each other. A larger commitment lifts the headline credit (good for the proposal) but raises overshoot and expiry (bad for the buyer), and a list-denominated credit makes the repricing leakage worse the further OCI list sits above market. The buyer who negotiates the floor down, sizes the commitment to real consumption, and structures credits to avoid expiry can lift the effective value well above $0.54; the buyer who accepts Oracle's sizing and floor as presented frequently realises less.
| Component | Per $1 credit | What it is | Buyer control |
|---|---|---|---|
| Headline credit | $1.00 | Advertised draw-down allowance | — |
| Discount-floor repricing | −$0.18 | Credit denominated against above-market OCI list | High — negotiate floor |
| Minimum-commitment overshoot | −$0.16 | Commit sized above real consumption | High — right-size |
| Unburned-credit expiry | −$0.12 | Credits unused at term end vanish | Medium — pacing & rollover |
| Effective realised value | $0.54 | What the credit is actually worth | Recoverable to ~$0.80 |
The strategic point is that the credit dollar is the most negotiable number in the entire package, precisely because Oracle leads with it. Every cent of leakage maps to a contract lever a buyer can pull before signing: the floor against a benchmarked rate, the commitment against a real consumption forecast, and the expiry against rollover or pacing terms. An incentive that returns $0.54 as presented is not a reason to walk away — it is a reason to negotiate, because the gap between $0.54 and $0.80 is pure buyer value left on the table, and it exists only because the proposal was accepted at face value.
Short answer: 61% of enterprises that accept an Oracle OCI migration incentive pay more over the following three years than they would have on a like-for-like baseline (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026). The share climbs to 71% for buyers who commit to Annual Universal Credits with no exit plan, and falls to 39% for those who right-size the commitment and hold a walk-away position.
The 61% headline hides a wide spread, and the spread is the actionable part. Whether an enterprise ends up ahead or behind depends far less on OCI's underlying price — which is competitive for many workloads — than on how the incentive was structured and whether the buyer kept any leverage for the renewal. The dividing line is planning. Buyers who treated the incentive as a discount on consumption they had already decided to make, and who reserved a credible exit, land in the minority that saves. Buyers who let the headline credit justify a larger OCI commitment than they needed, and who migrated without a year-three plan, land in the majority that pays more.
Illustrative aggregate. Share of buyers whose net three-year Oracle cost exceeded the baseline. Source: Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026.
The table adds the magnitude alongside the frequency, because "paying more" understates the asymmetry. The cohort that pays more does so by a median 31%; the cohort that saves does so by a median 12%. That asymmetry — a bigger downside than upside — is exactly what you would expect from an instrument designed to be attractive at signing and expensive at renewal. The "AUC commit, no exit plan" row is the danger zone: it is both the most likely to pay more and the most expensive when it does, because an over-sized commitment compounds the burn-down loss with the year-three repricing.
| How the incentive was taken | Share paying more | Median delta if paying more | Median delta if saving |
|---|---|---|---|
| Migration credits only (no commit) | 54% | +18% | −14% |
| AUC commit, no exit plan | 71% | +34% | −7% |
| AUC commit, exit plan held | 39% | +16% | −19% |
| Support Rewards layered on ULA | 64% | +27% | −9% |
| Overall | 61% | +31% | −12% |
The contrast between the two AUC rows is the whole study in miniature. Same product, same credits, same Oracle — a 32-point swing in the probability of paying more, driven entirely by whether the buyer right-sized the commitment and kept a walk-away position. That is the difference independent, buyer-side preparation makes, and it is why the incentive should never be evaluated on Oracle's spreadsheet alone. The instrument is not inherently bad value; it is inherently structured to extract value from the unprepared.
Short answer: Enterprises consume a median 78% of their committed Annual Universal Credits, so 22% expires unused each year, and only 38% of buyers burn 90% or more of their commitment (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026). Over-commitment is structural: Oracle ties the discount floor to commit size, so the deal desk sizes the commitment above realistic consumption to lift both the headline discount and the contracted value.
Annual Universal Credits is the mechanism that turns a cloud trial into a multi-year obligation. OCI Universal Credits is Oracle's prepaid consumption model: you commit a fixed dollar amount of Oracle Cloud Infrastructure spend, draw it down against any OCI service at the discounted floor rate, and forfeit any unused balance at term end. The model is genuinely flexible on the consumption side — credits apply across compute, storage, database, and PaaS — but it is unforgiving on the commitment side, because the use-it-or-lose-it term converts every dollar of over-sizing into a dead loss. And over-sizing is not the exception; it is engineered into the pricing.
The engineering is simple. Oracle's discount floor scales with the size of the commitment: a larger commit unlocks a deeper floor. That gives the deal desk a clean incentive to push the commitment above the buyer's realistic consumption forecast, because a bigger number simultaneously raises the contracted value Oracle books and lets the rep present a more impressive discount. The buyer hears "commit more and your rate drops" and rarely hears the corollary — "and the gap between your commitment and your usage is money you forfeit." The result is the burn-down shortfall: a median 22% of committed credits expiring unused, and the shortfall widening at the largest commit sizes where the over-sizing pressure is strongest.
Illustrative aggregate. Lower copper bar = consumed; upper red bar = expired unused. Source: Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026.
The table translates the percentages into forfeited dollars, which is where the burn-down stops being an abstraction. At the $20M+ commit band, a 31% shortfall is $6.2M of paid-for credit walking out the door every year — frequently more than the entire headline migration credit that justified the deal in the first place. The pattern is deliberately counter-intuitive: the buyers with the most negotiating power, the largest accounts, suffer the worst burn-down, because the discount-floor-for-commit-size mechanic bites hardest exactly where the numbers are biggest.
| Annual commit size | Median consumed | Expired unused | Forfeited $ / yr | Burn ≥90% |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Under $1M | 71% | 29% | ~$0.22M | 26% |
| $1M–$5M | 78% | 22% | ~$0.55M | 41% |
| $5M–$20M | 74% | 26% | ~$2.6M | 35% |
| $20M+ | 69% | 31% | ~$6.2M | 22% |
| Blended | 78% | 22% | — | 38% |
The defence is a consumption forecast the buyer owns, not one Oracle builds. Right-sizing the commitment to genuine, evidenced demand — and negotiating rollover or true-forward terms so that growth is rewarded rather than over-commitment penalised — turns the burn-down from a structural loss into a manageable risk. The instinct to "commit a bit more to get the better rate" is precisely the instinct the pricing exploits, and it is almost always wrong once the expiry maths is on the table.
Short answer: Oracle Support Rewards reduces the median enterprise's total Oracle tech support bill by 9%, not the 25-33% the headline rate implies, because rewards cannot exceed eligible support spend and OCI spend is usually a fraction of the support base (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026). It is a real offset on planned OCI consumption — never a reason to commit to OCI you do not need.
Oracle Support Rewards is the cleverest piece of the incentive because it appears to solve the problem buyers most want solved — the compounding support bill — while quietly steering them into the commitment that creates the next problem. Oracle Support Rewards is a program that reduces your on-premises Oracle technology support invoice by $0.25 for every $1 you spend on OCI ($0.33 for customers with an active Unlimited License Agreement). Stated that way it sounds like a 25-33% support discount. It is not, for two reasons that the headline rate conveniently omits: the reward is capped at your eligible technology support spend, and your OCI spend is almost always far smaller than your total support base.
Work the maths and the gap is stark. A customer with a $10M total Oracle support bill, of which $6M is eligible technology support, spending $4M a year on OCI, earns $1M in Support Rewards at the standard $0.25 rate — a real saving, but only 10% of the total support bill, not 25%. Push OCI spend higher and the reward grows, but so does the commitment and its burn-down exposure, so the support saving is bought with cloud over-commitment. The eligibility cap is the hard ceiling: rewards can never reduce eligible support below zero, so beyond a certain OCI-to-support ratio additional cloud spend earns no further offset at all.
Illustrative aggregate. Median realised reduction in total Oracle tech support bill after the eligibility cap. Source: Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026.
The table shows the realised offset across customer profiles, and the pattern confirms the rule: Support Rewards is worth the most to buyers who were already going to spend heavily on OCI, and worth the least — sometimes nothing at the margin — to buyers who manufacture OCI spend to chase the reward. The ULA row earns the higher $0.33 rate but still lands at a 14% realised reduction, because even an unlimited-licence customer's eligible support is finite against a large support base.
| Customer profile | Reward rate | Realised support reduction | Binding constraint |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard OCI customer | $0.25 / $1 | 9% | Eligible support cap |
| Active ULA customer | $0.33 / $1 | 14% | Eligible support cap |
| Heavy OCI consumer | $0.25 / $1 | 18% | OCI spend / cap balance |
| Manufactured OCI spend | $0.25 / $1 | ~3% net | Burn-down losses exceed reward |
The discipline is one sentence: take Support Rewards on the OCI spend you were going to make anyway, and never let the reward justify a dollar of commitment beyond that. As a discount on planned consumption it is genuine, uncomplicated value. As a reason to inflate an Annual Universal Credits commitment it is a trap, because the burn-down loss on the inflated commitment routinely exceeds the reward it was meant to earn. Buyers comparing this offset against the alternative of simply cutting the support bill should weigh it against an independent Oracle third-party support savings benchmark, where the saving is unconditional and does not require any cloud commitment at all.
Short answer: At the first post-incentive renewal — typically year three — the effective OCI rate rises a median 34% for buyers with no leverage, as migration credits expire, the discount floor resets, and workloads are migrated and hard to move (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026). Buyers who arrive with a credible exit or multicloud BATNA recover a median 19 of those points.
The year-three renewal is where the incentive reveals its purpose. At signing, the buyer has leverage — workloads are on-premises, the migration has not happened, and Oracle wants the deal — so the discount floor is deep and the credits flow. By the renewal, every one of those conditions has inverted. The migration credits have expired. The workloads have moved onto OCI, where switching to another provider carries real re-architecture, egress, and re-platforming cost. And the discount floor, which is set per term, resets to whatever the new negotiation produces — which, against a customer with no exit, is a worse number. BATNA (Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement) is the buyer's credible walk-away position, and at the year-three OCI renewal it is the only thing standing between the customer and the repricing.
Illustrative aggregate. Change in effective OCI rate at first post-incentive renewal vs the incentive-term rate. Source: Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026.
The table puts discount-floor numbers on the leverage spectrum. The "no leverage" column is the default outcome Oracle prices for: a 63%-off floor during the incentive term resets to 48% off at renewal, which is a 34% increase in the effective rate the buyer pays per unit of consumption. The recovery from a credible BATNA is not theoretical — a customer who has genuinely scoped a multicloud or repatriation alternative, and can show Oracle the work, holds the floor far closer to where it started, because Oracle's deal desk reprices hardest against accounts it believes are captive.
| Leverage at renewal | Floor during term | Floor at renewal | Effective rate change | Points recovered |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No leverage (captive) | 63% off list | 48% off list | +34% | — |
| Multicloud BATNA scoped | 63% off list | 58% off list | +12% | 19 pts |
| Exit credibly executed | 63% off list | 65% off list | −4% | Full reset |
The lesson is to treat the year-three renewal as the real negotiation and the original signing as the warm-up. That means building the exit option during the incentive term, not scrambling for it at renewal: keeping a portability path for the most movable workloads, avoiding OCI-only architectures where a portable design costs little more, and documenting a credible alternative Oracle can see. The negotiation discipline is the same one that governs every Oracle renewal — quantified in our Oracle discount benchmark by deal size — applied to the cloud line. A buyer who plans for the repricing converts a +34% shock into a +12% or better outcome, and the difference is worth more than the entire original migration credit.
Short answer: The net three-year cost delta worsens as the workload gets more Oracle-proprietary and harder to move: a disciplined lift-and-shift IaaS BYOL migration runs +14%, PaaS/middleware +21%, Autonomous Database +29%, and a Fusion SaaS conversion +38% (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026). Lock-in, not list price, drives the gap.
Not all OCI migrations carry the same incentive risk, and the variable that predicts the outcome is portability. The more an architecture commits to Oracle-proprietary services with no equivalent elsewhere, the less credible the buyer's year-three exit, and the harder Oracle reprices. A lift-and-shift of a workload onto OCI IaaS under BYOL — Bring Your Own License, where the customer applies existing Oracle licences to cloud compute rather than buying license-included cloud services — keeps the workload portable and the buyer's leverage intact, so the three-year delta is contained. At the other extreme, a Fusion SaaS conversion replaces a licence the customer owned outright with a subscription the customer rents forever, and the lock-in is near-total.
Illustrative aggregate. Net three-year Oracle cost delta vs baseline, by migrated workload type. Source: Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026.
The table adds the deal-size dimension, and the two interact. Larger deals attract deeper headline incentives but also larger commitments and worse burn-down, so the net delta does not fall as fast with size as a buyer might hope. The best outcomes sit at the intersection of a portable workload and a right-sized commitment; the worst sit at the intersection of a proprietary workload and an over-sized one. The SaaS conversion row is the one to flag in red on any board paper: converting perpetual licences to subscription is the single most expensive thing a buyer can do with an OCI incentive, and it is frequently the conversion Oracle pushes hardest because it is the most permanent.
| Workload type | Portability | <$1M deal | $1M–$5M | $5M+ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lift-and-shift IaaS (BYOL) | High | +11% | +14% | +17% |
| PaaS / middleware | Medium | +17% | +21% | +25% |
| Autonomous Database | Low | +24% | +29% | +33% |
| Fusion SaaS conversion | Very low | +31% | +38% | +44% |
The practical rule that falls out of the table is to migrate for portability and price the lock-in explicitly. Where a workload can move under BYOL on portable infrastructure, the incentive can be genuinely good value and the year-three risk is manageable. Where Oracle is steering toward Autonomous or SaaS, the buyer should demand a corresponding premium in the incentive to compensate for the leverage they are surrendering — and frequently should decline, because no migration credit large enough to offset permanent lock-in has ever appeared in our engagement base.
Short answer: Rebuild the full three-year cash position before signing, benchmark the discount floor, right-size the Annual Universal Credits commitment to evidenced consumption, take Support Rewards only on planned OCI spend, design for portability, and hold a credible exit for the year-three renewal. Done in sequence, this moves a buyer from the 61% who pay more into the cohort that saves (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026).
OCI incentives fail buyers not because OCI is overpriced but because the package is evaluated on Oracle's year-one spreadsheet instead of the buyer's three-year position. The following sequence is the one we run to capture the genuine value and disarm the structure.
Accepting Oracle's OCI migration incentives leaves 61% of enterprises paying more within three years than a like-for-like baseline, with an average net three-year cost increase of 23% above the pre-incentive run-rate (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026). Every $1 of headline OCI credit returns a median $0.54 of effective value once discount-floor repricing, minimum-commitment overshoot, and unburned-credit expiry are netted out. The credits front-load value and back-load cost.
OCI Universal Credits is Oracle's prepaid cloud consumption model: you commit a fixed dollar amount of Oracle Cloud Infrastructure spend, draw it down against any OCI service at discounted rates, and any unused balance expires at the end of the commit term. An Annual Universal Credits commitment is the 12-month version. Because the discount floor scales with commit size, Oracle's sizing pushes buyers to over-commit, and a median 22% of committed credits expires unused each year (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026).
Oracle Support Rewards reduces your on-premises technology support bill by $0.25 to $0.33 for every $1 spent on OCI, but the realised saving is far smaller because rewards cannot exceed eligible support spend and OCI spend is usually a fraction of the support base. In the Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark (2026), Support Rewards reduces the median enterprise's total Oracle tech support bill by 9%, not the 25-33% the headline implies. Take it on planned OCI spend, never on manufactured spend.
Enterprises consume a median 78% of their committed Annual Universal Credits, so 22% expires unused each year, and only 38% of buyers consume 90% or more of their commitment (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026). Over-commitment is structural: Oracle ties the discount floor to commit size, so the deal desk sizes the commitment above realistic consumption to lift both the headline discount and the contracted dollar value. The fix is a buyer-owned consumption forecast.
At the first post-incentive renewal — typically year three — migration credits are gone, the discount floor resets, and workloads are migrated and hard to move, so the effective OCI rate rises a median 34% for buyers with no leverage (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026). Buyers who arrive with a credible exit or multicloud BATNA recover a median 19 of those points, holding the increase to about 12%. The renewal, not the signing, sets the real OCI price.
Support Rewards is worth taking only for spend you were going to make on OCI anyway. It is a genuine offset on real consumption, but it is not a reason to commit to OCI you do not need, because the reward is capped at your eligible support bill and unused commitment costs far more than the reward returns. Treat it as a discount on planned OCI usage, never as a justification for a larger Universal Credits commitment (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026).
Free OCI migration credits cost more because they buy lock-in, not just compute. The credits fund a one-time migration that moves workloads onto OCI; once there, switching costs are high, so at renewal Oracle holds the leverage and reprices upward. The credits are front-loaded value against a back-loaded, recurring, repriced bill — which is why 61% of enterprises that accept them pay more within three years (Oracle Licensing Experts benchmark, 2026). Design for portability to keep the exit credible.
The figures are an illustrative aggregated advisory benchmark derived from Oracle Licensing Experts engagement experience across 600+ enterprise Oracle cloud and licensing reviews, published Oracle Universal Credits and PaaS/IaaS price lists, and OCI ordering documents seen in advisory work. All numbers are anonymised and not client-identifying. Oracle Licensing Experts is independent and not affiliated with Oracle Corporation.
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