fitgap

Oracle Identity Management

Features
Ease of use
Ease of management
Quality of support
Affordability
Market presence
Take the quiz to check if Oracle Identity Management and its alternatives fit your requirements.
Pricing from
Free Trial
Free version
User corporate size
Small
Medium
Large
User industry
  1. Energy and utilities
  2. Banking and insurance
  3. Public sector and nonprofit organizations

What is Oracle Identity Management

Oracle Identity Management is an enterprise identity and access management suite used to manage authentication, authorization, and identity lifecycle processes across applications and infrastructure. It is typically deployed by IT and security teams in organizations that need centralized access control, user provisioning, and governance capabilities. The product family commonly includes components for access management (SSO/MFA), identity governance, directory services, and privileged access integrations, with strong alignment to Oracle application and database ecosystems.

pros

Broad IAM suite coverage

The Oracle Identity Management portfolio spans access management, identity governance, directory services, and lifecycle provisioning capabilities. This breadth supports organizations that prefer a single vendor stack for multiple IAM functions rather than assembling separate point solutions. It also enables consistent policy and identity data handling across multiple IAM use cases.

Strong enterprise integration options

Oracle Identity Management supports common enterprise IAM patterns such as SSO, federation, and connector-based provisioning to applications and directories. It is often used in environments with complex on-premises systems and hybrid architectures. Organizations running Oracle enterprise applications and databases can typically integrate IAM controls with those platforms using vendor-supported approaches.

Governance and compliance features

The suite includes capabilities commonly used for access governance, such as access request workflows, approvals, and audit-oriented reporting. These functions help organizations document who has access to what and why, and support periodic access reviews. This is relevant for regulated industries that need evidence of access controls.

cons

Complex deployment and operations

Implementations can require significant planning, specialized skills, and ongoing administration compared with more streamlined cloud-first IAM services. Multi-component architectures may increase operational overhead for upgrades, patching, and high availability. Organizations often rely on experienced internal teams or systems integrators to implement and maintain the environment.

Licensing and cost complexity

Pricing and licensing can be difficult to estimate because capabilities may be packaged across multiple modules and editions. Total cost can increase with scale, high availability requirements, and the need for additional components (for example, governance vs. access management). This can be a constraint for smaller organizations or teams seeking simpler subscription models.

Cloud directory not primary focus

While Oracle offers directory services and cloud identity options, Oracle Identity Management is commonly positioned for enterprise IAM suites and hybrid/on-premises deployments rather than as a lightweight cloud directory-first product. Organizations primarily seeking a modern cloud directory with rapid rollout may find the suite heavier than necessary. Some use cases may require additional Oracle cloud identity services depending on the target architecture.

Plan & Pricing

Plan Price Key features & notes
Foundation Free for eligible Oracle cloud customers (no public price listed) Basic identity functions: user management, group management, password management, basic reporting. Provided free to customers who subscribe to Oracle SaaS/PaaS/OCI; cannot integrate with third-party applications. (See Oracle docs.)
Standard (Enterprise & Consumer users) Paid — unit pricing shown as "User per month" in Oracle Cloud Price List (exact numeric rates require currency selection on Oracle's price list and are not displayed in the static page crawl) Full integration with Oracle Cloud and third-party apps, advanced OAuth capabilities, social login, provisioning bridge. Bring-Your-Own-License (BYOL) options exist for some on-prem licenses.
Access Governance (Premium) Paid — tiered per-workforce/consumer user per month (numeric rates not extracted) Governance features billed by number of active identities with tier thresholds (first 10,000 workforce identities, 10k–30k, >30k). See official licensing documentation.
OCI IAM (External User / Oracle Apps Premium / Premium) Paid — per-user per month; add-ons (SMS, tokens) billed per-message/token as shown in Oracle Cloud Price List (numeric rates require currency selection) OCI IAM SKU variants for external users, Oracle Apps Premium, SMS and token billing.

Notes: Numeric per-user/unit prices for Oracle Identity Cloud Service and OCI IAM are listed in Oracle's Cloud Price List but are presented on the vendor site as dynamic content that requires currency selection/interactive rendering; the static public pages and documentation do not show fixed USD amounts in a crawlable form, so I did not fabricate numeric rates.

Seller details

Oracle Corporation
Austin, Texas, USA
1977
Public
https://www.oracle.com/
https://x.com/oracle
https://www.linkedin.com/company/oracle/

Tools by Oracle Corporation

Oracle Cloud PaaS
Oracle Java Cloud Service
Oracle Developer Cloud Service
Oracle Fusion Middleware
Oracle JDeveloper
Oracle Application Testing Suite
Apiary
Oracle API Manager Cloud Service
Oracle API Platform Cloud
Oracle Application Express
Oracle Java Downloads
GraalVM
Oracle Mobile Application Framework
Oracle Visual Builder Cloud Service
Oracle Data Access Components
Oracle ADF Faces
Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Resource Manager
Solaris Zones
Oracle Application Container Cloud
Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Container Engine for Kubernetes

Best Oracle Identity Management alternatives

JumpCloud
Auth0
OneLogin
Okta
See all alternatives

Related stack guides

HR
Route onboarding tasks from new hire to IT provisioning
Step1
Register the new hire and trigger the onboarding workflow
Step2
Generate department-specific task lists from role templates
Step3
Provision application access based on role profile

Popular categories

All categories