
Cato SASE Cloud
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
- Real estate and property management
- Construction
- Retail and wholesale
What is Cato SASE Cloud
Unified WAN and security
Cloud backbone with PoPs
Multiple access on-ramps
Provider dependency and lock-in
Not best for niche routing
Cost and sizing complexity
Plan & Pricing
Pricing model: Subscription / bandwidth- and user-based licensing (usage-like) How Cato describes it on its official site: - Licensing is sold as site bandwidth licenses (Mbps per site) and mobile/user licenses; advanced security services, managed services, and hardware (Cato Socket) are add-ons. - Purchases, upgrades, and renewals are handled via Cato sales or authorized resellers/partners; prices are set on the applicable Order and are not published on the public site. Public list prices: Not published on Cato’s official website. Official documents (MSA, product pages, and support knowledge base) describe license types, bandwidth-based site licenses, and that trial licenses exist, but do not list dollar amounts. Example licensing elements (as documented on Cato’s official site, not prices):
- Site bandwidth licenses (Mbps) – assigned per site (regional/global pools supported).
- Mobile/remote access user licenses (per-user).
- SSE 360 security stack (included in SASE offering as a licensed service).
- Cato Socket hardware (sold/managed as HaaS) and optional managed services (MDR, ILMM, PS) – priced per quantity or per site. Notes & procurement:
- Cato’s MSA states fees are set forth in the applicable Order and that Cato treats pricing as confidential.
- The Cato learning/support docs state trial licenses (default 30 days) are available for PoC and that to purchase you must contact Cato or a reseller.
- Some specific product constraints are documented (e.g., Cloud Interconnect minimums such as 500 Mbps for a Cloud Interconnect site), but no list prices accompany these items on the official site.