Austrian organisations running Oracle — banks, industrial groups, utilities and the public sector — face Oracle’s License Management Services (now GLAS) reviews, where processor and Named User Plus counts, virtualisation and the Java SE employee metric drive exposure. This page covers the Oracle metrics, the Austrian legal and procurement context, and the firms covering this pair — listed alphabetically with balanced pros and cons, not ranked.
Last reviewed: 5 June 2026
Oracle’s commercial pressure in Austria comes through License Management Services (rebranded GLAS, Global Licensing and Advisory Services) reviews and the soft-audit scripts that precede them. The metrics that matter are the Processor licence — physical cores multiplied by Oracle’s core factor — and Named User Plus (NUP), with Database options and packs (Partitioning, Diagnostics, Tuning, Advanced Security) layered on top. Two issues dominate: soft-partitioning on VMware, where Oracle’s policy position differs from many customers’ reading of their contracts, and the Java SE Universal Subscription, now priced per employee rather than per user.
For Austrian buyers the recurring issues are VMware clusters scoped more widely than expected, options and packs enabled but not licensed, and Java estates that became chargeable under the employee-based model. The firms here work buyer-side to test Oracle’s reading before its figure becomes the baseline.
Oracle is described factually. The metrics that drive your exposure are Processor, NUP and the Java SE employee subscription; here is how they are counted.
Oracle Database is licensed per processor — physical cores times Oracle’s core factor — so virtualisation and chip choice move the number.
NUP counts named individuals and devices with a per-processor minimum; under-counted NUP is a common finding.
Oracle’s policy treats VMware as soft partitioning, so a whole cluster can be scoped in — a contested reading worth testing on your contract.
Partitioning, Diagnostics and Tuning packs are easy to enable and easy to forget; unlicensed use is a frequent finding.
The Java SE Universal Subscription is priced per employee, not per user, which can make a small Java footprint surprisingly costly.
Oracle’s own licensing team runs the review; an independent reading of scope and contract is the buyer-side counterweight.
Austria is a civil-law jurisdiction. Commercial contracts are governed by the General Civil Code (Allgemeines Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch, ABGB) and, for commercial dealings, the Business Code (Unternehmensgesetzbuch, UGB); the ABGB sets a short limitation period of three years for many claims and a long-stop of thirty years, though the period that governs an alleged licensing shortfall depends on the contract, its characterisation and its governing-law clause, and many enterprise agreements specify a foreign governing law or arbitration seat.
As an EU member state, Austria applies the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) as supplemented by the national Data Protection Act (Datenschutzgesetz, DSG). Transferring deployment or employee-linked data — including the headcount data relevant to a Java employee subscription — to an auditor outside the EEA raises lawful-basis and transfer-mechanism questions and is a legitimate lever over the scope and conduct of a review. Public-sector procurement follows the EU-derived rules, which set expectations of documented, orderly process. None of this is legal advice; confirm your position with qualified Austrian counsel.
This page is general information about the Austria legal and procurement environment and Oracle’s licensing practices, not legal advice for your situation. Oracle’s program is described factually; figures are labelled indicative.
Listed alphabetically with balanced pros and cons — a directory, not a ranking.
German vendor-neutral consultancy with a SAM and audit-defense practice across the DACH region, fluent in German contract and works-council practice.
Vendor-agnostic licensing boutique founded by ex-vendor auditors. Does not resell, implement or conduct audits, focusing solely on buyer-side Oracle, SAP, IBM and Microsoft defense and negotiation.
German-speaking audit-consulting boutique specialising in Oracle and Autodesk for the DACH market, with no Oracle or Autodesk partnership.
Buyer-side independent licensing advisory with one of the broadest multi-vendor footprints, covering Oracle, Microsoft, SAP, IBM, Broadcom, Salesforce, ServiceNow and Workday.
DEMO — listings are compiled from public information and labelled demo until the verified registry is live. Firms are listed alphabetically, never ranked. Independence is shown as a pro; a reseller, Big-Four or vendor-side audit relationship is shown as a con — each a factual trade-off for you to weigh.
Indicative only. Oracle matters in Austria resolve at the negotiation table rather than in court. The buyer-side levers are testing the soft-partitioning scope against your actual contract, reconciling enabled options and packs to what is licensed, and modelling the Java SE employee subscription against genuine need before committing to a number.
Because the largest swings are usually VMware cluster scoping and the per-employee Java metric, the realistic goal is to narrow scope to what the contract supports and right-size Java before renewal. Any specific figure a firm cites is indicative and self-reported until the verified registry is live.
Up to the Oracle hub and the Austria hub, across to sibling markets and services.
By Processor — physical cores multiplied by Oracle’s core factor — or by Named User Plus (NUP), which counts named individuals and devices subject to a per-processor minimum. Database options and packs such as Partitioning, Diagnostics and Tuning are licensed separately on top.
Oracle’s policy treats VMware as soft partitioning, so its position can be that an entire cluster — not just the hosts running Oracle — must be licensed. That reading is contested and depends on your specific contract, which is why testing scope before accepting a figure is the central buyer-side lever.
The Java SE Universal Subscription is priced per employee rather than per user or per processor, so even a small Java footprint can become costly because the count is based on total headcount. Right-sizing and confirming genuine need is part of the advisory work.
It depends on the contract. The Austrian Civil Code (ABGB) sets a short limitation period of three years for many claims and a long-stop of thirty years, but the period that governs an alleged licensing shortfall turns on the agreement’s characterisation and any foreign-law clause. Confirm the position for your specific contract with qualified Austrian counsel. This is information, not legal advice.
This page lists DACH and global independents whose remit covers Oracle and who serve the Austrian market, including firms with explicit DACH coverage. Their Austria-specific depth varies and is noted as a factual trade-off, not a ranking.
Yes. The directory and the matching service are free for buyers. We publish no prices or fees and take no money from software publishers, and no vendor ever sees your brief.
Tell us your Oracle estate, virtualisation and Java footprint and we route your brief to firms covering Oracle for Austrian buyers. The directory and matching are free for buyers, no vendor ever sees your brief, and no firm is recommended over another.
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