Wow there have been so many changes with virtualization from 2024 into 2025, when looking back at the ground we have covered so far in 2024 and now moving into 2025. When it comes to hypervisors there are so many to choose from these days. Let’s look at the best OS for virtualization at the start of 2025 and what is on the list for running your virtualized environments.
The List
The list of best OS for virtualization in my viewpoint of experience and testing comes down to the following:
- VMware vSphere
- Nutanix
- Proxmox
- XCP-ng
- Hyper-V
- Other hypervisors
Let’s see why I have picked these as the ones that most will want to go with and the advantages and disadvantages of each one.
1. VMware vSphere
Despite all the fallout from the Broadcom purchase being finalized with VMware and the major changes Broadcom has brought about with VMware licensing and the cost of everything. If we are strictly looking at the best hypervisor in terms of features and capabilities at the start of 2025, VMware vSphere is still it.
There is just no other hypervisor that can do everything that VMware can do, period. Please change my mind on that if you think otherwise. From my perspective it has the killer set of features and capabilities that anymore we just assume is standard.
One new feature that helps illustrate this is the new NVMe memory tiering. VMware is the only hypervisor on the planet at this point that allows me to take 96 GB of memory in a mini PC and turn that into almost half a terabyte of memory.
Pound for pound, feature by feature, VMware leads the pack. Learn more about VMware here: VMware by Broadcom – Cloud Computing for the Enterprise.
The pain
However, there is a pain tolerance with VMware in multiple senses. Organizations are feeling the pain from a cost perspective and licensing changes due to the Broadcom acquisition. Also, current customers will feel the pain in another sense if they decide to migrate. I read an interesting article on Techradar that cited a recent study from Gartner. You can read that here: Companies switching from VMWare should expect high-cost high-risk journey | TechRadar.
In the article it was stated:
A new report entitled ‘Estimating a Large-Scale VMware Migration’ published by Gartner found migration projects could take 18-48 months for large organizations (2,000+ employees) with more than 100 servers. It also found that each virtual machine could cost between $300 and $3,000 to change. Moreover, just the initial scoping process could cost companies around seven to 10 workers for up to a month.
This is what Broadcom is counting on. The pain involved with migration outweighs any price increases coming to the subscription model and SKU changes. The costs to migrate are not insignificant. It is this broad ecosystem of solutions that are intertwined with VMware that really there is no replacement in other hypervisors as of yet.
Options
However, if you are used to VMware vSphere and the features it provides, the next best alternative will arguably be Nutanix. It has the enterprise polish and features that would come closest to matching VMware. If you are looking for something open source, go with Proxmox or XCP-ng. While Proxmox is great, it is just not as good as VMware for a pure feature to feature comparison of what both can do.
2. Nutanix
Nutanix is another enterprise grade hypervisor. It did not cut its teeth in open source and like VMware vSphere is a proprietary offering. When I say it didn’t cut its teeth in open source, a fun fact about Nutanix is that it is based on the KVM hypervisor which is a free and open-source hypervisor.
Nutanix has made a name for itself in the realm of hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI) and even a recent news tidbit is that Dell and Nutanix inked a deal that is going to go after many of the disgruntled customers from the VMware side of things that are wanting to jump ship from Broadcom’s licensing and cost increases.
Nutanix makes a lot of sense for many since it has always been the real contender with VMware vSphere in the enterprise. It seems like if customers are not running VMware, they are running Nutanix or Hyper-V.
Nutanix also has a free Community Edition that I definitely applaud as it lets VMware vSphere admins get a feel for Nutanix and learn the hypervisor solution in their home labs which I have been able to benefit from as well.
For migration, they have the Nutanix Move utility that arguably provides the slickest migration experience from VMware. This is a free download and adds the ease of migration to getting your VMs out of the VMware ecosystem.
Nutanix like VMware will require that you purchase your own backup solution. But, most enterprise backup solutions that customers are using today support backing up a Nutanix environment.
Learn more about Nutanix here: Transform Your Business with Hybrid Multicloud | Nutanix.
The pain
It is also costly. Nutanix is not known for being a cheap solution. Rather it has historically been just as expensive as VMware. However, with the recent subscription pricing changes and SKU changes with Broadcom, it may well come in cheaper now. Keep in mind the unseen costs however in migrating, mentioned at the outset.
3. Proxmox
I would call Proxmox the “home lab darling” since everyone and their brother is spinning up a Proxmox server in the home lab environment. I think it really shines in this realm of home labs, tinkerers, and even small to medium businesses. It is open source and allows most to do what they want to do, run virtual machines and even LXC containers as lightweight altneratives.
It has even features that we see in enterprise hypervisors like VMware by providing clustering, live migration, and even HCI storage in the form of Ceph storage you can easily integrate into Proxmox.
Proxmox also recently introduced the VMware Import utility that will be a game changer as it matures and is making it much easier for ones to migrate from VMware vSphere in their home lab environment.
Proxmox also has a free enterprise backup solution called Proxmox Backup Server that will allow you to have a free solution to back up your virtual machines and containers. Also, in 2024, many of the enterprise backup solutions, like Veeam, announced and introduced support for backing up Proxmox VE Server.
Learn more about Proxmox here: https://proxmox.com/
The pain
However, there are downsides to Proxmox such as support. So far as I can tell, Proxmox only offers 5 days a week support. There may be other third-party integrators or MSPs that can take up the slack on this front, but through Proxmox themselves this is not available.
I think when it comes to mission critical applications, this will be a deal breaker for companies wanting to check out Proxmox for running their workloads. However, there are also features that make it very appealing still, like free backup software that is built into the solution and platform that cuts not only the cost of the hypervisor, but also you won’t have to pay for backups.
Also, Proxmox has a new migration wizard built into the solution that provides an easier way to migrate your workloads. However, keep in mind this is still in its early stages and will involve pain in moving your VMs. These still need to be powered off, it is limited to pointing directly at the ESXi host currently instead of vCenter, and has other limitations, such as snapshots being present on the source VM.
4. XCP-ng
XCP-ng is another great open source option that is gaining traction in the home lab and in the enterprise. XCP-ng is an open source version of the Citrix hypervisor. It also has similar architecture to VMware in the sense that you have your hypervisor hosts and then you have the Xen Orchestra appliance that unlocks more features and management capabilities.
This is very similar to the relationship between VMware ESXi and vCenter Server. So, I think from that perspective, it will feel very familiar to vSphere admins. Like Proxmox, it also has its own backup solution that you can use to backup virtual machines in XCP-ng.
Also, XCP-ng has its own backup solution that is available. This means that you can likely drop your subscription to enterprise backups if you so desire. However, there are definitely limitations in the native backup solution, such as features around application-aware backups, etc.
Learn more about XCP-ng here: XCP-ng – XenServer Based, Community Powered.
The pain
I don’t care as much for XCP-ng and the interface as much as I like Proxmox (even though Proxmox’s interface is outdated). Proxmox’s interface while still rather archaic compared to the vSphere Client, still feels more intuitive to me than clicking around in the XO interface (Xen Orchestra).
XO does have a built-in migration wizard from VMware, however, this is part of their pay for subscription to have access to these bits.
5. Hyper-V
Hyper-V is the often frowned upon hypervisor among hypervisor geeks. I haven’t really talked to an admin yet who really loves Hyper-V. If they are using it, it is because that is the direction the organization wanted to go normally due to licensing.
Microsoft definitely makes the case that Hyper-V is not going anywhere and they use it for everything, including Xbox. But I still question why things seem so stale with Hyper-V? And, Microsoft is pushing customers towards the Azure Stack HCI solution that forces you into an Azure management model.
I really think that at some point in the future Microsoft will make customers enable Hyper-V through Azure, but I could be wrong on that front.
Learn more about Hyper-V here: Introduction to Hyper-V on Windows | Microsoft Learn.
The pain
Most people I talk to just hate Hyper-V. It hasn’t changed much in the Windows Server variant in years. The interface is archaic, and it just has the stigma that is hard to shake that it is built on Windows, which is not necessarily known for its stability and flexibility.
Hyper-V also has also just lacked the “vcenter-like” appliance that allowed easy management. System Center Virtual Machine manager also looks archaic and is a pay-for product. Microsoft now seems to just want you to manage everything from the cloud, which I know many do not care for, especially when it comes to on-premises enterprise virtualization.
Other hypervisors
There are many other hypervisors to note, including the following:
- Kubevirt – free and open source virtualization built on top of Kubernetes
- HPE VM essentials – A new offering from HPE that provides a simple virtualization platform built on top of KVM
- Openshift – Red Hat’s virtualization solution for running VMs and containers
- Cloud – Google GCP, Microsoft Azure, and Amazon AWS IaaS platforms
The pain
These all have merit. However, they are much more niche offerings that just don’t have the widespread adoption or skillsets that exist with VMware virtualization. There is also the standing cost of migration to any of these platforms.
Wrapping up
There are many options that I see ones using in production and home lab environments today that I would consider the best hypervisor in 2025. There are honestly a lot of great options to choose from. All the way from enterprise hypervisors we have used for decades now to open-source solutions that have started to come onto the scene. I still love the features and capabilities of VMware vSphere as it shows that it is still the one to beat from a pure features perspective. However, the open-source solutions as well as Nutanix are also appealing alternatives and gaining momentum.
As we have seen, there is a pain tolerance that comes from any of the solutions, either from a pricing perspective, features, migration cost, or lack of tools.
0 Comments