Gartner Forecasts Increased Spending on Desktop as a Service as Cost Optimization, Sustainability Drive Adoption

While secure remote access remains a key driver of DaaS adoption, a growing number of deployments now focus on broader efficiency goals, according to Gartner's 2025 Magic Quadrant for Desktop as a Service .

DaaS has become a foundational technology across enterprises, not just for supporting remote workers, but as a strategic tool for managing costs, streamlining IT operations and advancing sustainability initiatives. According to Gartner, by 2027, virtual desktops will be financially viable for 95% of the workforce, up dramatically from just 40% in 2019. Moreover, one in five employees is expected to rely on virtual desktops as their main computing environment, double the 2019 figure. These shifts signal that DaaS is transitioning from niche to mainstream within enterprise IT.

2025 Magic Quadrant for Desktop as a Service
[Click on image for larger view.] 2025 Magic Quadrant for Desktop as a Service (source: Gartner).

DaaS is the provision of virtual desktops by public cloud or other service providers, delivering desktop or application end-user experiences from virtual machines accessed using a remote display protocol. Offerings include a fully managed control plane that brokers user connections and provides a management interface, available either preconfigured as a service or as a platform customers assemble and manage themselves.

Gartner forecasts DaaS spending to grow from $4.3 billion in 2025 to $6.0 billion by 2029, a 7.9% compound annual growth rate. Net-new desktop virtualization deployments are almost exclusively DaaS, with on-premises VDI either migrating to DaaS or adopting a cloud control plane for all but a few specialized cases.

Cost optimization is becoming a driver for adoption. The report notes that total cost of ownership for DaaS, especially when paired with thin-client endpoints, is now lower than that of a laptop PC for many use cases. Vendors are adding AI-based capabilities for right-sizing configurations and improving efficiency.

The 2025 Leaders quadrant features:

  • Microsoft – Offers Azure Virtual Desktop, Windows 365 and Microsoft Dev Box, combining self-assembled and vendor-assembled options. Benefits from broad workplace, cloud and AI integration, though Azure Virtual Desktop is seen as more complex to configure than Windows 365.
  • AWS – Provides Amazon WorkSpaces and AppStream, with strong geographic coverage, out-of-the-box monitoring and automation, and vertical-specific solutions.
  • Citrix – Longstanding desktop virtualization vendor with broad configuration flexibility, regulatory compliance options, and a strategy to deliver an experience "as good or better than a local PC."
  • Omnissa – Horizon platform supports on-premises, hybrid and multicloud deployments, with a proprietary protocol optimized for high-latency connections and broad geographic support.

About the Author

David Ramel is an editor and writer at Converge 360.

Featured

  • Abstract futuristic digital network with glowing padlock icons

    Microsoft Intros New Agentic AI Security Multi-Model Defense System

    A new multi-model agentic AI security system built by Microsoft's Autonomous Code Security team helped researchers find 16 new vulnerabilities across the Windows networking and authentication stack, the company anounced in a recent security blog post.

  • Abstract background with a dynamic wave

    New Initiative Aims to Help Move AI Projects from Experimentation to Production

    Microsoft has unveiled Frontier Company, making a $2.5 billion bet that the next competitive battleground in artificial intelligence will not be foundation models, but helping enterprises put those models to work.

  • businessman holding tablet with holographic AI icons

    Google Moves AI Agents into the Mainstream

    At its recent I/O developer conference, Google presented artificial intelligence agents not as a distant research project, but as a product strategy spanning Search, personal assistants, productivity software, developer tools, and smart glasses.

  • closeup of person wearing abstract smart glasses

    Google Unveils Android XR Smart Glasses, Powered by Gemini AI

    More than a decade after the commercial failure of Google Glass, Google is returning to the smart-glasses market, this time betting that advances in artificial intelligence, miniaturized hardware, and conversational computing can turn wearable devices into a mainstream platform.