It’s time for our quarterly update of our SQL ConstantCare® population report, showing how quickly (or slowly) folks adopt new versions of SQL Server. In short, people are replacing SQL Server 2016 and 2017 with 2022!
I do think that 2025 will pick up steam. The marginal change was mostly into 2022, but 2025 wasn’t officially released until November and I’m guessing not many companies upgraded in December. I do think we’ll see some pickup of SQL Server 2025 in this quarter.
As always, this is my throat-clearing reminder that what Brent has is a biased sample of the SQL Server population and is not necessarily reflective of the population as a whole. It’s a very interesting sample upon which to reflect, but its specific bias is that it necessarily only includes customers of Brent Ozar’s service, which will be a specific subset of organizations.