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The SaaS Price Shock Reshaping the Build-vs-Buy Decision

With SaaS vendors hiking renewal fees 20–40%, UK mid-market firms are finding bespoke software breaks even faster than ever. Here's what the numbers actually show.

April 7, 2026
Build vs BuySaaS CostsTotal Cost of Ownership
The SaaS Price Shock Reshaping the Build-vs-Buy Decision

For most of the past decade, the default answer to 'build or buy?' was straightforward: buy. SaaS promised predictable costs, rapid deployment, and someone else's engineering team maintaining the infrastructure. The maths seemed to favour it decisively. That calculus is now shifting — not because bespoke development has become cheaper in isolation, but because the true cost of off-the-shelf software has risen sharply and often without warning.

Salesforce, Zendesk, and a growing list of enterprise SaaS vendors have put through fee increases of 20–40% across recent renewal cycles — a pattern that accelerated following private equity acquisitions and post-IPO margin pressure. For UK mid-market organisations locked into multi-seat licences, these aren't minor line-item adjustments. They're material budget shocks that are forcing finance directors and technical leads to revisit assumptions they haven't questioned in years. The five-year total cost of ownership model that once made SaaS the safe choice is producing some uncomfortable answers.

Why the Old Rule of Thumb No Longer Holds

The traditional heuristic was simple: bespoke software makes sense only for organisations with highly differentiated workflows that genuinely cannot be served by existing products. For everyone else, the upfront development cost, ongoing maintenance liability, and opportunity cost of internal focus made off-the-shelf the rational default. That framing assumed SaaS pricing would remain relatively stable — or at least that increases would be gradual and predictable enough to absorb.

That assumption has broken down. When a CRM or customer service platform doubles in effective cost over a three-to-five year period through a combination of seat-price increases, tier restructuring, and the forced migration to more expensive product bundles, the breakeven point for a bespoke alternative moves significantly earlier. Organisations that modelled a seven-to-eight year payback on custom development are now seeing revised projections closer to four or five years — and in some cases less, particularly where licence volumes are high or where the vendor's feature roadmap has drifted away from the customer's actual needs.

The Hidden Costs That Compound the Problem

Headline licence fees are only part of the story. The SaaS pricing model has become increasingly sophisticated at extracting value beyond the core subscription. API call limits, storage thresholds, premium support tiers, and add-on modules that were once bundled as standard are now itemised separately. Integration costs — connecting a repriced platform to the rest of your technology estate — tend to rise in lockstep, either through increased middleware fees or the internal engineering time required to maintain compatibility across forced version upgrades.

There is also the subtler cost of functional compromise. Most SaaS platforms are built for the median customer in their target segment. For organisations whose operations sit at the edges of that median — whether through regulatory complexity, unusual workflow structures, or the need to integrate tightly with proprietary internal systems — the gap between what the platform does and what the business actually needs is filled with workarounds, manual processes, or expensive professional services engagements with the vendor. These costs rarely appear in the initial TCO model, but they accumulate steadily and are notoriously difficult to attribute accurately in retrospect.

What a Rigorous TCO Model Should Actually Include

Decision-makers revisiting the build-vs-buy question should insist on a TCO model that treats both options with equal scrutiny. On the SaaS side, this means stress-testing the licence cost against realistic renewal scenarios — not the vendor's current list price, but a range that reflects the pricing trajectory of the past three cycles. It means accounting for integration and maintenance costs, not just subscription fees, and including a realistic estimate of the productivity overhead associated with working around the platform's limitations.

On the bespoke side, the model needs to be equally honest. Development cost, quality assurance, initial deployment, and a properly costed ongoing support and evolution budget should all be included. The common mistake is to model bespoke development as a one-time capital expenditure with minimal ongoing cost — that underestimates the real picture. But equally, a well-scoped bespoke system built on a maintainable modern stack, with a clear support arrangement in place, carries far more predictable long-term costs than a vendor relationship where pricing is ultimately controlled by someone else's commercial strategy.

Where Bespoke Now Has a Genuine Commercial Advantage

The organisations for whom the current environment most strongly favours a bespoke approach share a few common characteristics. They are typically running high licence volumes — thirty or more seats — on platforms that have seen significant price increases. They have workflows that the platform serves imperfectly, creating measurable inefficiency or requiring meaningful workarounds. And they have reasonable confidence in the stability of their core processes, meaning a bespoke system built today will not require fundamental rearchitecting in three years.

Sector-specific considerations matter too. UK organisations in financial services, legal, healthcare, and regulated manufacturing often carry compliance requirements that generic SaaS platforms accommodate awkwardly, if at all. The cost of maintaining compliance in a poorly fitted platform — through configuration overhead, audit preparation, and the ongoing risk of a vendor change breaking a compliance-critical workflow — is a legitimate line item in any honest TCO comparison. For these organisations in particular, the commercial and operational case for bespoke development has rarely been stronger.

The decision to build bespoke should never be taken lightly, and the SaaS vendors who have raised prices aggressively are not the only ones capable of delivering poor value. A bespoke project scoped poorly, built on inappropriate technology choices, or handed off without a credible support model carries its own category of risk. The point is not that bespoke is always the right answer — it is that the conditions under which it becomes the right answer have shifted materially, and many organisations are working from assumptions that are three to five years out of date.

If your organisation is approaching a significant SaaS renewal — particularly one where you have already absorbed one or more substantial price increases — this is the moment to commission a proper TCO analysis rather than accepting the renewal on reflex. The numbers may surprise you. And if they do, the conversation about what a bespoke alternative would actually look like, cost, and deliver is worth having before you sign another three-year term with a vendor whose pricing you no longer control.

Why are SaaS vendors increasing renewal prices so dramatically right now?

A combination of post-pandemic contract normalisations, rising infrastructure costs, and the shift to usage-based AI feature pricing is driving renewal increases of 20–40% across major SaaS categories. Vendors who locked in low pricing during growth phases are now repricing to reflect current market rates.

How do we know when it makes financial sense to build rather than buy software?

Build becomes attractive when a SaaS tool covers more than 60% of your workflow out of the box but charges for 100%, when vendor lock-in is materially impacting your agility, or when the cumulative annual licence cost exceeds the amortised development and maintenance cost of a custom solution within three years.

What hidden costs should we include in a build-vs-buy analysis?

Build costs include development time, infrastructure, security, ongoing maintenance, and the opportunity cost of engineering capacity. Buy costs include licence fees, integration work, data migration, customisation limits, and the risk premium of vendor dependency. Both sides are typically underestimated.

Which SaaS categories are seeing the highest renewal price increases?

Productivity suites, CRM platforms, data analytics tools, and security software have seen the most significant increases, partly driven by the bundling of AI features that users may not have requested. Storage and collaboration tools are also repricing as vendors consolidate market share.

Can we negotiate a better renewal price with our existing SaaS vendor?

Yes — vendors consistently offer better terms to customers who demonstrate they have evaluated alternatives and are prepared to switch. Multi-year commitments, reduced seat counts, and timing negotiations around vendor quarter-end dates are the most effective levers.

What is the risk of switching from a mature SaaS product to a custom-built system?

The primary risks are underestimating build complexity, losing vendor-provided compliance and security infrastructure, and the disruption of migrating historical data. Mitigate these by scoping builds narrowly to your core workflows and retaining the SaaS tool for non-critical functions during transition.

How do open-source alternatives factor into the build-vs-buy decision?

Open-source alternatives can dramatically reduce software costs but introduce hidden costs around implementation, customisation, security patching, and support. The total cost of ownership for open-source tools is often comparable to SaaS once engineering time is factored in.

How should mid-market UK businesses approach SaaS portfolio rationalisation?

Audit all SaaS subscriptions annually, identifying underutilised tools and overlapping capabilities. Consolidate onto fewer vendors where possible to improve negotiating leverage, and create a tiered classification of core, standard, and discretionary tools with different renewal scrutiny levels.

What is "SaaS sprawl" and how does it affect the build-vs-buy decision?

SaaS sprawl refers to the accumulation of disconnected tools across a business, often adopted by individual teams without central oversight. It inflates total software spend, creates integration complexity, and obscures the true cost of any single tool — all of which distort build-vs-buy analysis.

How do AI-powered internal tools change the economics of building custom software?

AI code generation has materially reduced the cost of building and maintaining custom software, shifting the break-even point in favour of build for a wider range of use cases. UK businesses should re-run their build-vs-buy analyses using AI-assisted development cost assumptions rather than historical benchmarks.

Build vs Buy SaaS Costs Total Cost of Ownership

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May 2026
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