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Azure Backup

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What is Azure Backup

Azure Backup is a cloud-based backup service within Microsoft Azure that protects workloads such as Azure virtual machines, Azure file shares, and on-premises servers via the Microsoft Azure Recovery Services (MARS) agent or Azure Backup Server. It is used by IT teams that want centralized backup management and retention in Azure, including long-term retention and policy-based scheduling. The service integrates with Azure services for identity, monitoring, and role-based access control, and stores backups in a Recovery Services vault or Backup vault.

pros

Native Azure workload coverage

Azure Backup provides first-party backup for common Azure resources such as Azure VMs and Azure Files, managed through Azure portals and vaults. This reduces the need to deploy and maintain separate backup infrastructure for many Azure-native scenarios. It also supports on-premises Windows Server backup via the MARS agent and Azure Backup Server for broader workload coverage. For organizations standardizing on Azure, this simplifies operational alignment with existing cloud governance.

Policy-based retention and scheduling

The service supports centralized backup policies, scheduling, and retention management across protected items. It offers long-term retention options and supports different backup frequencies depending on workload type. Administrators can apply policies at scale and monitor jobs and alerts through Azure management tooling. This is useful for organizations that need consistent backup controls across multiple subscriptions or environments.

Security and access controls

Azure Backup integrates with Azure role-based access control (RBAC) and supports features such as soft delete for recovery points (where available) to reduce accidental or malicious deletion risk. Backup data is stored in Azure and can be encrypted in transit and at rest using Azure mechanisms and customer-managed keys in supported scenarios. Centralized auditing and activity logs in Azure help with operational oversight. These controls align with common enterprise requirements for backup administration separation and traceability.

cons

Azure-centric architecture

Azure Backup is designed primarily for Azure and Microsoft-centric environments, and it is less flexible for heterogeneous infrastructure compared with platforms that emphasize broad hypervisor, storage, and application ecosystems. Protecting non-Azure workloads often requires additional components (for example, agents or Azure Backup Server) and may not match the experience of Azure-native backups. Organizations with significant multi-cloud or non-Microsoft stacks may need supplementary tools. This can increase operational complexity when standardizing across diverse environments.

Restore performance and workflows vary

Restore options and recovery time depend on workload type, vault configuration, and network connectivity to Azure. Some recovery scenarios require additional steps (for example, staging restores, rehydration, or agent-based recovery), which can be slower than local appliance-based restores for large datasets. Testing and documenting restore runbooks is important because workflows differ between Azure VMs, file shares, and on-premises agent backups. This variability can complicate meeting strict RTO/RPO targets across all workloads.

Cost and feature complexity

Pricing combines protected instance charges with backup storage consumption, and costs can rise with long retention periods and large datasets. Feature availability and configuration differ between Recovery Services vault and Backup vault, and between workload types, which can be confusing during design and migration. Organizations may need careful policy design to avoid unexpected storage growth and egress-related costs during restores. This requires ongoing monitoring and cost governance rather than a one-time setup.

Plan & Pricing

Pricing model: Pay-as-you-go (usage-based; two billing components)

Billing components (from official Azure docs):

  • Protected Instances: primary billing unit. Charged per protected instance; instances are categorized by the amount of data protected (examples of categories shown on the vendor page: <=50 GB; >50 GB and <=500 GB; >500 GB (billed per 500 GB increment)). This applies to VMs and on-prem servers and similarly for other workload types (SQL Server on Azure VMs, SAP HANA, etc.).
  • Backup Storage: billed separately per GB-month. Standard tier (default) and Archive tier available; storage redundancy options include LRS, ZRS, GRS and RA-GRS. Storage charges appear as separate line items on the monthly bill.

Workload / special cases called out on vendor site:

  • Azure Disks: charged as incremental snapshots (snapshot storage charges) and do not incur Protected Instance fee when snapshots are used as described on the vendor page.
  • AKS: AKS Protected instance defined as the AKS cluster; pricing may be per Namespace for AKS (vendor page lists a per-Namespace charge).
  • Vaulted backup (Azure Files/Blobs/ADLS): vaulted backup protected-instance charges are expressed as percentages of the protected-instance price for small tiers (e.g., <10 GB = 10% of a protected instance; 10–100 GB = 30%; 100 GB–1 TB = 60%), with >=1 TB falling into the full protected-instance band.

Reserved capacity / discounts:

  • Backup Storage Reserved Capacity: 1-year and 3-year commitment options; purchasable in increments of 100 TB and 1 PB for the term. Vendor page lists reserved-capacity options as the storage-discount mechanism.

Other billing notes from official site:

  • Restores from Standard tier have no transaction or egress charges; Archive tier rehydration incurs a one-time retrieval fee and an Archive early deletion prorated fee with a 180-day minimum.
  • Protected Instance charges are prorated by days if protection begins mid-month.

Example costs / concrete prices:

  • Not available on the public Azure Backup pricing page HTML scrape I accessed: the official pricing page lists the size bands and billing structure but the numeric per-instance and per-GB rates did not render in the static view (the pricing tables in the official page show placeholders when fetched without the interactive pricing calculator/region selection). Therefore I could not reliably extract numeric price figures from the official vendor pages for inclusion here.

Pricing model summary suitable for FitGap:

  • Pricing model: Pay-as-you-go (Protected Instance fees + Backup Storage per GB-month)
  • Free tier: none shown for Azure Backup on Microsoft’s "free services" list (see notes)
  • Free trial: Azure offers a free account with $200 credit for 30 days which can be used to trial Azure services (including Backup).

Official pages used: Azure Backup pricing/details (pricing page) and Azure account / free trial pages (refer to submitted citations).

Seller details

Microsoft Corporation
Redmond, Washington, United States
1975
Public
https://www.microsoft.com/
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https://www.linkedin.com/company/microsoft/

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