Businesses in 2025 generally prefer SaaS for its speed, scalability, OpEx pricing, and ease of integration—while regulated and latency‑sensitive cases still favor on‑prem or hybrid deployments for control, data residency, and change‑management timing. The market data points to a continued budget shift toward cloud/SaaS, with many enterprises layering hybrid SaaS to balance compliance and autonomy.
What’s driving SaaS preference
- Cost and speed
- Scale and agility
- Integration and remote work
Why some still choose on‑prem or hybrid
- Control and compliance
- Customization and performance
Side‑by‑side considerations in 2025
- Total cost of ownership
- Security model
- Vendor dependence vs autonomy
Where the market is heading
- Budget shift to cloud
- Hybrid as a compromise
Decision checklist
- Regulatory requirements and data residency mandates for the region/industry.
- In‑house IT capacity to run and secure infrastructure vs the need for speed.
- Integration landscape and remote work realities that favor API‑first delivery.
- Latency, customization, and planned change windows that might necessitate on‑prem/hybrid.
Bottom line
Most organizations are leaning SaaS in 2025 due to time‑to‑value and flexibility, but control and compliance keep on‑prem and hybrid in play—especially in regulated sectors. A pragmatic approach is “SaaS by default, hybrid where required,” driven by data residency, update control, and latency constraints.
Related
Which industries still favor on-prem in 2025 and why
How do total costs compare for mid-sized firms choosing SaaS vs on-prem
What security trade-offs should I expect when moving critical apps to SaaS
How will hybrid cloud trends change vendor lock-in and customization options
Which compliance scenarios force companies to keep data on-prem