The European Commission ends its investigation into whether SAP restricted competition in the market for maintenance and support services for legacy software. The probe focused on practices in Europe’s “aftermarket,” where customers may seek alternatives to the vendor as products near the end of their support terms. The Commission had raised concerns that SAP made it harder for rival providers to compete, potentially limiting customer choice and increasing costs.

SAP has agreed to several commitments. It abolishes reinstatement fees, which are charged when customers return to SAP maintenance and support after a period without it. SAP also reduces back-maintenance fees for customers who re-engage support after being away. In addition, SAP clarifies the conditions governing how customers can choose different maintenance and support providers and different levels of SAP support.

The changes are relevant to organizations considering third-party support to continue running legacy products. One cited example is SAP ERP Central Component (ECC), whose mainstream support ends in December 2027, with an extended maintenance option running until December 2030. The Commission reports SAP’s commitments remain in force globally for ten years.