Free NewsletterPro Login

SAP Just Said It Will Open Its AI Tools To On-Premises Customers

Published May 6, 2026
Share:
Summary:
  • SAP plans to extend its AI features to customers still running on-premises ERP, reversing years of cloud-only positioning.
  • CEO Christian Klein is pairing the move with a shift from per-user pricing to consumption-based pricing.
  • SAP shares have lost about a fifth of their value this year as investors question SaaS pricing in an AI world.

For more than ten years SAP's pitch has been simple. Move to the cloud, or get left behind. AI was the big carrot.

Now SAP is putting that carrot back on the table. It is offering it to customers who never made the jump.

The reason is that AI is forcing the whole software industry to rewrite how it sells.

Pricing Shifts From Per-User To Per-Use

SAP's old model charged customers per user, or per seat. AI agents are now doing the work that used to need a person at a screen.

That breaks the link between users and value. CEO Christian Klein laid it out in a Bloomberg interview earlier this year.

He said it would be foolish to keep charging by subscription. The reason is that AI is taking over so many tasks.

The company is moving to consumption-based pricing. Customers will pay for what the AI actually does, not how many badges scan in.

That puts SAP in the same camp as cloud infrastructure firms. Costs scale with use, not seat counts.

On-Premises Customers Get AI Access

A huge chunk of SAP's revenue still sits with customers running older on-premises systems. That includes S/4HANA on-prem and ECC.

SAP has spent years pushing those customers toward the cloud. It did that by making cloud-only features the only way to access new tools.

Opening AI access to those customers is a clear shift. SAP would rather collect AI fees from a non-cloud customer than lose them to rivals.

It also lowers the political cost of staying on-prem. Customers who wanted AI but did not want to rip out their old systems now have a third path.

Investor Pressure On The Pivot

SAP shares have lost about 20% of their value this year. Investors are watching the pricing shift closely.

The new model removes the planning power that made SaaS so valuable on public markets. Klein is also building out new "forward deployed engineering" teams to work with customers hands-on.

SAP also agreed to buy Reltio, a master data firm, and Dremio, a data lakehouse. Both deals are meant to feed SAP's AI agents the clean data they need.

Without good data, the AI agents cannot run a workflow.

The new pricing model also adds risk for customers. They have to forecast AI use up front to budget for it.

What To Watch

The real question is whether SAP customers actually move more work onto AI agents. Consumption pricing only works if usage goes up.

If usage stays flat, the model that replaces SaaS could end up smaller than the one it killed.

SAP also has to keep up with rivals like Oracle and Workday. All of them are pitching the same AI story to the same shrinking pool of buyers.

For investors, the next signal will be SAP's earnings calls. Klein has to show that AI use is rising fast enough to offset the move away from per-seat fees.

Without that growth, the new model could just shrink the pie. The bull case is that AI tools drive far more usage per customer over time.

The bear case is that customers cap their AI use to keep bills in check.

Disclosure

Get Market Briefs delivered to your inbox every morning for free!

No fluff. No noise. No politics. Just finance news you can read in 5 minutes.

Blogs

May 5, 2026
How to Create Multiple Income Streams: A Beginner's Playbook
  • Most people rely on a single income stream from their job - which is also the most heavily taxed.
  • Multiple income streams come from a mix of cash flow, dividends, side businesses, real estate, and royalties.
  • The fastest path for most beginners is starting with one extra stream - usually dividends or a side hustle - and stacking from there.
Read More
May 5, 2026
The 60/40 Portfolio Explained: A Beginner's Guide
  • A 60/40 portfolio holds 60% in stocks and 40% in bonds (or other fixed income).
  • It's designed to balance growth from stocks with stability from bonds.
  • Your "right" mix depends on age, time horizon, income needs, and how well you sleep when markets drop.
Read More
May 5, 2026
How to Invest in Silver: A Beginner's Guide
  • Silver is both a precious metal and an industrial metal, used in solar panels, electronics, and medical tech.
  • Investors can buy silver four main ways: physical bars and coins, ETFs, mining stocks, or futures contracts.
  • Most beginners are best served by allocating a small slice of their portfolio to silver - usually between 1% and 3%.
Read More
May 1, 2026
Asset Allocation by Age: The Right Portfolio Mix at Every Stage of Life
  • Younger investors should hold mostly stocks because they have decades to recover from crashes and benefit from compounding.
  • Allocations gradually shift toward bonds and stable income as retirement approaches, but stocks remain important even past age 65 to outpace inflation.
  • Annual rebalancing is essential - it forces you to buy low and sell high while keeping your portfolio aligned with your actual life stage.
Read More
April 30, 2026
Stablecoin Explained: Why Some Cryptocurrencies Actually Aren't Volatile
  • Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies pegged to stable assets like the US dollar, giving crypto-style speed and access without the volatility of Bitcoin or Ethereum.
  • Fiat-backed stablecoins like USDC are the safest option, while algorithmic stablecoins have failed spectacularly and should generally be avoided.
  • Stablecoins fit a portfolio as cash reserves with better yields, a hedge against crypto volatility, and a fast, cheap rail for international transactions.
Read More
April 30, 2026
Buy Now, Pay Later Risks: Why This "Easy" Payment Method Is Dangerous to Your Wealth
  • Buy now, pay later services like Klarna, Affirm, and Sezzle are debt products designed to feel harmless while keeping users in a cycle of overspending.
  • BNPL exploits psychological debt blindness, triggers late fees, and damages credit scores without helping users build positive credit history.
  • Building real wealth means waiting 30 days, paying upfront when you have the cash, and avoiding systems built to extract money from your future income.
Read More
April 30, 2026
Dividend Payout Ratio: The Secret Metric That Shows If a Stock Is Safe or Risky
  • Dividend payout ratio is total dividends paid divided by net income, showing the percentage of earnings a company returns to shareholders.
  • A 20-50% payout ratio is generally safe and sustainable, while ratios above 75% often signal a dividend cut is coming.
  • High dividend yields can be warning signs, not opportunities - safety and dividend growth matter more than the headline yield number.
Read More
April 30, 2026
Ethereum for Beginners: What It Is and Why Smart Investors Are Paying Attention
  • Ethereum is a blockchain platform that runs smart contracts, while Ether (ETH) is the cryptocurrency that powers the network.
  • Use cases include decentralized finance, NFTs, gaming, supply chain tracking, and digital identity - many still experimental.
  • Most investors should treat Ethereum as a small allocation hedge using dollar-cost averaging, not a get-rich-quick lottery ticket.
Read More
April 30, 2026
Dollar Cost Averaging Strategy: How to Beat Emotion and Build Wealth Steadily
  • Dollar cost averaging means investing the same amount at regular intervals regardless of what the market is doing.
  • The strategy automatically buys more shares when prices are low and fewer when prices are high, lowering your average cost over time.
  • DCA removes emotion, eliminates the need to time the market, and turns volatility into a mathematical advantage for long-term investors.
Read More
April 30, 2026
The BRRRR Strategy: How to Build Real Estate Wealth Without Big Money Down
  • BRRRR stands for Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat - a five-step framework for scaling real estate without saving for big down payments.
  • The strategy works by buying distressed properties below market value, adding value through smart renovations, and pulling out equity through refinancing.
  • Tax advantages like depreciation and mortgage interest deductions make BRRRR a powerful tool for owners willing to manage tenants and contractors.
Read More
1 2 3 20
Share via
Copy link