Azure Lab Services Is Retiring: What to Use Instead (and How to Plan Your Migration)

Microsoft has announced that Azure Lab Services will be retired on June 28, 2027. New customer sign-ups have already been disabled as of July 2025, which means the clock is officially ticking for anyone using the service today.

You can read the official announcement on Microsoft Learn here: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/lab-services/retirement-guide

While 2027 may feel a long way off, now is the time to take action!

For those of you who have never heard of Azure Lab Services, lets take a look at what it was and how you would have interacted with it (even if you didn’t know you were!).

What is/was Azure Lab Services?

Image: Microsoft Learn

Azure Lab Services allowed you to create labs with infrastructure managed by Azure. The service handles all the infrastructure management, from spinning up virtual machines (VMs) to handling errors and scaling the infrastructure.

If you’ve ever been on a Microsoft course, participated in a Virtual Training Days course, or attended a course run by a Microsoft MCT, Azure Lab Services is what the trainer would have used to facilitate:

  • Classrooms and training environments
  • Hands-on labs for workshops or certifications
  • Short-lived dev/test environments

Azure Lab Services was popular because it abstracted away a lot of complexity around building lab or classroom environments. Its retirement doesn’t mean Microsoft is stepping away from virtual labs—it means the responsibility shifts back to architecture choices based on the requirements you have.

If you or your company is using Azure Lab Services, the transition to a new service is one of those changes where early planning pays off—especially if your labs are tied to academic calendars, training programmes, or fixed budgets.

So what are the alternatives?

Microsoft has outlined several supported paths forward. None are a 1:1 replacement, so the “right” option depends on who your users are and how they work. While these solutions aren’t necessarily education-specific, they support a wide range of education and training scenarios.

Azure Virtual Desktop (AVD)

Image: Microsoft Learn

🔗 https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/virtual-desktop/

AVD is the most flexible option and the closest match for large-scale, shared lab environments. AVD is ideal for providing full desktop and app delivery scenarios and provides the following benefits:

  • Multi-session Windows 10/11, which either Full Desktop or Single App Delivery options
  • Full control over networking, identity, and images. One of the great new features of AVD (still in preview mode) is that you can now use Guest Identities in your AVD environments, which can be really useful for training environments and takes the overhead of user management away.
  • Ideal for training labs with many concurrent users
  • Supports scaling plans to reduce costs outside working hours (check out my blog post on using Scaling Plans in your AVD Environments)

I also wrote a set of blog posts about setting up your AVD environments from scratch which you can find here and here.

Windows 365

🔗 https://learn.microsoft.com/windows-365/

Windows 365 offers a Cloud PC per user, abstracting away most infrastructure concerns. Cloud PC virtual machines are Microsoft Entra ID joined and support centralized end-to-end management using Microsoft Intune. You assign Cloud PC’s by assigning a license to that user in the same way as you would assign Microsoft 365 licences. The benefits of Windows 365 are:

  • Simple to deploy and manage
  • Predictable per-user pricing
  • Well-suited to classrooms or longer-lived learning environments

The trade-off is that there is less flexibility and typically higher cost per user than shared AVD environments, as the Cloud PC’s are dedicated to the users and cannot be shared.

Azure DevTest Labs

Image: Microsoft Learn

🔗 https://learn.microsoft.com/azure/devtest-labs/

A strong option for developer-focused labs, Azure DevTest labs are targeted at enterprise customers. It also has a key difference to the other alternative solutions, its the only one that offers access to Linux VMs as well as Windows VMs.

  • Supports Windows and Linux
  • Built-in auto-shutdown and cost controls
  • Works well for dev/test and experimentation scenarios

Microsoft Dev Box

🔗 https://learn.microsoft.com/dev-box/

Dev Box is aimed squarely at professional developers. It’s ideal for facilitating hands-on learning where training leaders can use Dev Box supported images to create identical virtual machines for trainees. Dev Box virtual machines are Microsoft Entra ID joined and support centralized end-to-end management with Microsoft Intune.

  • High-performance, secure workstations
  • Integrated with developer tools and workflows
  • Excellent for enterprise engineering teams

However, its important to note that as of November 2025, DevBox is being integrated into Windows365. The service is built on top of Windows365, so Micrsoft has decided to unify the offerings. You can read more about this announcement here but as of November 2025, Microsoft are no longer accepting new DevBox customers – https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/dev-box/dev-box-windows-365-announcement?wt.mc_id=AZ-MVP-5005255

When First-Party Options Aren’t Enough

If you relied heavily on the lab orchestration features of Azure Lab Services (user lifecycle, lab resets, guided experiences), you may want to evaluate partner platforms that build on Azure:

These solutions provide:

  • Purpose-built virtual lab platforms
  • User management and lab automation
  • Training and certification-oriented workflows

They add cost, but also significantly reduce operational complexity.

Comparison: Azure Lab Services Alternatives

Lets take a look at a comparison of each service showing cost, use cases and strengths:

ServiceTypical Cost ModelBest Use CasesKey StrengthWhen 3rd Party Tools Are Needed
Azure Virtual DesktopPay-per-use (compute + storage + licensing)Large classrooms, shared labs, training environmentsMaximum flexibility and scalabilityFor lab orchestration, user lifecycle, guided labs
Windows 365Per-user, per-monthClassrooms, longer-lived learning PCsSimplicity and predictabilityRarely needed
Azure DevTest LabsPay-per-use with cost controlsDev/test, experimentation, mixed OS labsCost governanceFor classroom-style delivery
Microsoft Dev BoxPer-user, per-monthEnterprise developersPerformance and securityNot typical
Partner PlatformsSubscription + Azure consumptionTraining providers, certification labsTurnkey lab experiencesCore dependency

Don’t Forget Hybrid Scenarios

If some labs or dependencies must remain on-premises, you can still modernise your management approach by deploying Azure Virtual Desktop locally and manage using Azure Arc, which will allow you to

  • Apply Azure governance and policies
  • Centralise monitoring and management
  • Transition gradually toward cloud-native designs

Start Planning Now

With several budget cycles between now and June 2027, the smartest move is to:

  1. Inventory existing labs and usage patterns
  2. Map them to the closest-fit replacement
  3. Pilot early with a small group of users

Azure Lab Services isn’t disappearing tomorrow—but waiting until the last minute will almost certainly increase cost, risk, and disruption.

If you treat this as an architectural evolution rather than a forced migration, you’ll end up with a platform that’s more scalable, more secure, and better aligned with how people actually learn and work today.

100 Days of Cloud – Day 89: Windows 365 Cloud PC or Azure Virtual Desktop?

Its Day 89 of my 100 Days of Cloud journey, and todays post is going to give a quick comparison between Windows 365 Cloud PC and Azure Virtual Desktop.

The global Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the demand for cloud-based solutions. Businesses and Educational Institutions have needed to quickly adapt to remote work and distance learning in a hybrid world.

While we’ve all seen or heard of Windows Remote Desktop Services, Citrix would to most of us be more recognizable as the leader in the VDI and Remote Desktop space down through the years. However, Microsoft are playing catch-up and given the integration offerings that are available across the multitude of Cloud Services, they have 2 offerings in Windows 365 Cloud PC and Azure Virtual Desktop. Both solutions allow you to easily support accessibility for users, on any device, from anywhere.

So they both sound like they do the same thing, and when logging on both look the same, but they’re not really. Lets take a closer look at the differences between then, the difference in costs and licencing, and try to determine which one is the best fit for your business.

Windows 365 Cloud PC

Windows 365 is a cloud-based service that automatically creates a new type of Windows virtual machine (Cloud PCs) for your end users. Each Cloud PC is assigned to an individual user and is their dedicated Windows device. Licences are purchased either through the Microsoft 365 Admin center or through the Windows Products site (if you do not have a Microsoft 365 Subscription), and are assigned directly to the user. When you assign a licence, the Cloud PC is automatically provisioned for you.

There are 2 subscription levels to choose from which each have a number of size options:

  • Business: this is for smaller organizations (up to 300 users) that want a simple way to buy, deploy, and manage Cloud PCs. The 3 size options are:
    • Basic (approx €35 per month): Recommended for light productivity and web browsers. Comes with 2 vCPU, 4GB RAM and 128GB of Storage. Supports Desktop versions of Office Apps, Teams and OneDrive
    • Standard (approx $40 per month): Recommended for full productivity and line of business apps. Comes with 2 vCPU, 8GB RAM and 128GB of Storage. Supports Desktop versions of Office Apps, Teams and OneDrive
    • Premium (approx $65 per month): Recommended for high performance workloads and heavy data processing. Comes with 4 vCPU, 16GB RAM and 128GB of Storage. Supports Desktop versions of Office Apps, Teams and OneDrive and also Dynamics 365, PowerBI and Visual Studio.
  • Enterprise: this is for organizations that want to manage their Cloud PCs with Microsoft Endpoint Manager and take advantage of integrations with other Microsoft services. There is no user limit on the Enterprise tier. The 3 size options are:
    • Basic (approx €35 per month): Integrated with Microsoft Endpoint Manager. Recommended for light productivity and web browsers. Comes with 2 vCPU, 4GB RAM and 128GB of Storage. Supports Desktop versions of Office Apps, Teams and OneDrive
    • Standard (approx $40 per month): Integrated with Microsoft Endpoint Manager. Recommended for full productivity and line of business apps. Comes with 2 vCPU, 8GB RAM and 128GB of Storage. Supports Desktop versions of Office Apps, Teams and OneDrive
    • Premium (approx $65 per month): Integrated with Microsoft Endpoint Manager. Recommended for high performance workloads and heavy data processing. Comes with 4 vCPU, 16GB RAM and 128GB of Storage. Supports Desktop versions of Office Apps, Teams and OneDrive and also Dynamics 365, PowerBI and Visual Studio.

So as we can see, there is no difference in the performance levels between the tiers, the only difference is the Microsoft Endpoint Manager integration on the Enterprise tier.

The big differences and advantage that Enterprise offers is:

  • Cloud PCs can be joined to your enterprise Active Directory domain and synced to Azure AD, or Azure AD joined.
  • the ability to connect your Cloud PC to your on-premises resources.
  • allows you to use custom images that you can build yourself as the base images for your Cloud PCs.

If you are not sure which option is best for you, Microsoft provides a Cloud PC Chooser website where you can fill in a number of questions to determine which Windows 365 Cloud PC is the right option for your business.

Azure Virtual Desktop

While Azure Virtual Desktop is similar in many ways to Windows 365 Cloud PC, these are really only on the surface. It also provides a virtual desktop to the user, but there is more flexibility in how this is delivered. However that flexibility comes with a greater need for administration and a larger workload for IT professionals.

One of the major benefits of Azure Virtual Desktop is that it can be delivered as either a personal desktop in the same way as Windows 365 Cloud PC or a pooled desktop where multiple users can access a pool of desktops.

Personal Desktops functions in the same way as Windows 365 Cloud PC but runs in a “pay as you use” pricing model and also allows for multiple user sessions on a single Windows 10 or 11 desktop.

Pooled desktops or personal host pools are a collection of nodes that runs a “user to desktop” relationship. You can create a pool of nodes to whatever sizing specification you require and assign them to users, so for example you could create a pool of 8 nodes and assign 40 users to those nodes. The user settings, profile and data changes are still present after logout as these are abstracted away from the OS Drives of each node to an FSLogix Profile container which holds the user profiles and is mounted transparently at logon to integrate with the User Session.

There is no limit to the number of pools, and these can be easily scaled either manually or automatically allowing you to add or reduce capacity based on demand which can help manage costs.

There is also an option (currently in preview) to run Azure Virtual Desktop on your on-premises Azure Stack HCI infrastructure which can further reduce costs and meet data locality requirements.

Conclusion

So thats an in-depth look and Windows 365 Cloud PC and a brief look at the differences in Azure Virtual Desktop, which I’m going to cover in more detail in the next few posts.

So which is the right choice? Depends on your requirements, Windows 365 Cloud PC gives you recurring monthly costs with very little administration or overheads, while Azure Virtual Desktop gives you more flexibility and a “pay as you use” model, but the administration effort is higher. There are plenty of 3rd party integrators out there to help with this administration load, and Nerdio is premier player in the market at present.

Hope you enjoyed this post, until next time!