Best Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) Providers for VMware ESXi

Find and compare the best Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) providers for VMware ESXi in 2026

Use the comparison tool below to compare the top Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) providers for VMware ESXi on the market. You can filter results by user reviews, pricing, features, platform, region, support options, integrations, and more.

  • 1
    Netreo Reviews

    Netreo

    Netreo

    $5/resource/mo
    1 Rating
    Netreo is the best full-stack IT infrastructure management and observation platform. Netreo is a single source for truth for proactive performance monitoring and availability monitoring of large enterprise networks, infrastructure, and applications. Our solution is used by: IT executives should have full visibility of the business service, right down to the infrastructure and network that supports them. IT Engineering departments are used as a decision support system to plan and architect modern solutions. IT Operations teams can have real-time visibility into what is going wrong in their environment, which bottlenecks exist, and who it is affecting. All of these insights are available for systems and vendor mix in large heterogeneous environments that are constantly changing. We have a growing list of vendors that we support (over 350 integrations), including network vendors, storage, virtualization, and servers.
  • 2
    MAAS Reviews

    MAAS

    Canonical

    $30
    Self-service, remote deployment of operating systems such as Windows, CentOS, ESXi, and Ubuntu on physical servers transforms your data center into a bare metal cloud environment. This Metal-As-A-Service (MAAS) solution enables provisioning for a variety of systems, offering on-demand server capabilities alongside remote edge cluster management. With comprehensive infrastructure monitoring and discovery features, it seamlessly integrates with tools like Ansible, Chef, Puppet, SALT, and Juju, ensuring rapid installations from scratch. Supporting VMware ESXi, Windows, CentOS, RHEL, and Ubuntu, it allows for the creation of customized images with pre-installed applications, as well as configurations for disk and network settings. The platform utilizes an API-driven approach for essential services such as DHCP, DNS, PXE, and IPAM, while a REST API facilitates streamlined provisioning processes. Furthermore, it incorporates LDAP user authentication and role-based access control (RBAC) to enhance security measures. Hardware testing and commissioning are integral parts of the solution, which is designed to deliver the quickest operating system installation times in the industry, thanks to its highly optimized image-based installer. MAAS is compatible with all certified servers from leading vendors and efficiently discovers servers located in racks, chassis, and broader data center networks, while also supporting major system BMCs and chassis controllers. The combination of these features allows organizations to manage their infrastructure more effectively and drive operational efficiency.
  • 3
    Multipass Reviews
    With just one command, you can swiftly create an Ubuntu virtual machine using Multipass, which is capable of launching and managing VMs while configuring them with cloud-init, akin to public cloud environments. This tool allows you to experiment with cloud launches right on your local machine at no cost, and in just five minutes, you'll realize how effortlessly a lightweight cloud setup can be achieved. To get started, you can launch several LTS instances, check their status, execute commands, apply cloud-init configurations, and remove older instances as needed. For those looking to master the Linux command line, the "Ubuntu Server CLI cheat sheet" serves as a quick reference for skills ranging from basic file management to advanced deployments like Kubernetes and OpenStack. Multipass also features a command line interface that simplifies the launching, management, and interaction with Linux instances. You'll find that downloading a fresh image is incredibly fast, enabling you to have a fully operational VM in mere minutes. Furthermore, you can create Ubuntu instances and initialize them with cloud-init metadata, similar to setups on AWS, Azure, Google, IBM, and Oracle clouds, allowing you to effectively simulate a cloud deployment directly on your workstation. This capability makes it easier than ever to experiment and learn about cloud computing without the need for extensive resources.
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