Software vendors often conduct license compliance audits of their customers to identify unlicensed usage and drive revenue through back-license fees or new sales. In 2023–2024, audit activity remains high – in fact surveys show it has increased significantly – and certain vendors are notorious for aggressive auditing practices. Below we present recent data on audit-related revenue and customer audit rates for major vendors (Oracle, Microsoft, Red Hat, Adobe, IBM, SAP, VMware, etc.), identify those known for aggressive audits, and highlight key audit trends in 2023–2024, with all facts backed by sources.

2023–2024 Audit Trends

Software audit activity has been rising in both frequency and financial impact in 2023–2024. Several industry surveys and reports confirm that companies are facing more audits and higher true-up costs:

The 2023–2024 period has seen a notable increase in software vendor audits and the financial impact of non-compliance. Vendors known for aggressive audits (Oracle, IBM, SAP, Micro Focus, etc.) have continued or even stepped up their efforts, while even cloud-era vendors still find ways to enforce compliance (though sometimes via different mechanisms). Companies are more likely than ever to face an audit – over 60% chance in a year (The Rising Cost of Software Compliance: 2025 Survey Highlights Growing Audit Frequency and Financial Impact on Businesses | Business Wire) – and those audits now often yield seven or eight-figure true-up demands (Study: Microsoft Is Most 'Aggressive' Software Auditor -- Redmond Channel Partner) (FinOps targets SaaS as software audit costs spike | CIO Dive). Being aware of which vendors are most aggressive and staying prepared for compliance reviews is crucial in this environment.

<aside>

Historical Overview

Oracle

Oracle is widely regarded as one of the most aggressive software auditors. Industry analysts and consultants note that Oracle uses audits as a “revenue generation” tool rather than purely for enforcing compliance (Oracle Acquires Cerner – What to Expect | Taft Technology and Artificial Intelligence Insights). Remarkably, an estimated 60% of Oracle’s software revenue is driven by license compliance audits (What is an Oracle License Audit?). In practice, this means a large share of Oracle’s sales come from customers purchasing licenses and paying back-support fees as a result of audit findings (What is an Oracle License Audit?). Oracle’s audits are often triggered by events like hardware refreshes, mergers, or simply as a tactic when sales reps need to meet quotas (Oracle Acquires Cerner – What to Expect | Taft Technology and Artificial Intelligence Insights) (What is an Oracle License Audit?).

Audit frequency

Oracle doesn’t publish how many customers it audits, but it’s substantial. One study found 21% of organizations had been audited by Oracle in a single year (2013–14) [ rcpmag.com ]. Oracle targets especially its database and middleware customers, and more recently its Java users.

Java compliance focus

In 2022 Oracle made software licensing changes for Java and subsequently over half (52%) of Oracle’s audit-related interactions were focused on Java compliance (Oracle goes on hunt for Java non-compliance | Computer Weekly). In early 2023 Oracle introduced a new Java SE subscription model that greatly expanded who needs a license (counting all employees, not just named users) (Oracle goes on hunt for Java non-compliance | Computer Weekly). Gartner and other analysts warn this will likely increase Oracle’s Java audits in 2023–2024 as Oracle targets even non-Oracle shops that use Java (Oracle goes on hunt for Java non-compliance | Computer Weekly).

Reputation

Oracle is consistently rated the worst vendor to deal with in audits. Historically, Oracle was voted the worst (least helpful) during audits, and “singled out” for the most aggressive, short-term revenue-driven behavior (Oracle slammed, Microsoft praised over software audits: Campaign for Clear Licensing - Software - CRN Australia). Customers and advisors report Oracle audit teams often stick to high findings even when shown evidence to the contrary, using the audit to pressure customers into buying more licenses or Oracle Cloud credits (3 customer examples of increased Oracle audit activity in 2022 - The ITAM Review).

Oracle derives significant revenue from compliance audits and is known to audit its customers frequently. Oracle’s aggressive tactics – described as “notoriously aggressive” (Oracle Acquires Cerner – What to Expect | Taft Technology and Artificial Intelligence Insights) – make it a top auditor, and 2023 has seen Oracle double down on areas like Java licensing to boost audit-driven revenue.