If you run SQL Server or Windows Server outside Azure using Microsoft subscription licences, Microsoft has made a licensing change you should be aware of.
As of April 2026, Microsoft has updated its Product Terms so that Windows Server and SQL Server subscription licences purchased through a Microsoft partner now include License Mobility rights.
These partner‑sold subscriptions sit under Microsoft’s Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) programme, which is now how most organisations buy Microsoft licences.
In practical terms, this means customers no longer lose deployment flexibility when moving from traditional Volume Licensing with Software Assurance to subscription‑based licensing.
For organisations with hybrid, hosted or outsourced infrastructure, this removes a long‑standing licensing constraint.
In plain English...
If you previously stayed on older Microsoft agreements so you could run SQL Server or Windows Server in hosted or third‑party environments, this change means you may now be able to use subscription licences without giving up that flexibility.
Historically, License Mobility was tied to Software Assurance under legacy Volume Licensing agreements.
That mattered because License Mobility allows organisations to:
When customers moved from Volume Licensing with Software Assurance to subscription licences bought through a partner, those rights were no longer clearly available.
The result:
Microsoft has now addressed that gap.
Microsoft updated the Product Terms under the Microsoft Customer Agreement so that eligible subscription licences now receive rights equivalent to Software Assurance.
The Product Terms now explicitly confirm that, for the duration of a subscription, customers are granted the same deployment rights that Software Assurance provided.
This applies to Windows Server and SQL Server subscription licences purchased through Microsoft partners.
License Mobility allows Microsoft server workloads to move with your infrastructure, rather than being tied to a single hosting model.
With License Mobility, eligible licences can be:
Until now, these rights largely applied only to customers with Software Assurance.
From April 2026, they are now available for eligible Microsoft subscription licences as well.
With this change, Windows Server and SQL Server subscription licences offer Software Assurance‑equivalent deployment flexibility.
That means:
For customers running hybrid estates, colocation, hosted platforms or structured outsourcing, this is a meaningful practical improvement.
Microsoft has been deliberate about scope. This change:
It’s also important to note:
Not all Microsoft licences can now be moved freely, and assumptions here can create compliance risk.
The updated rights apply automatically through Microsoft’s Product Terms. However:
The change reduces barriers, but it doesn’t remove the need for good licensing governance.
This update matters most if you:
If your infrastructure is hybrid or outsourced, this change removes a common licensing trade‑off.
If you’re reviewing your Microsoft estate, this is a sensible moment to reassess what can be simplified or modernised.
Thinking about reviewing your Microsoft licensing or SQL and Windows Server deployments?
Talk to Intercity and we’ll help you cut through the complexity with confidence.