Comprehensive guide for IT buyers — benefits, pricing models, vendor landscape, use cases, and how NaaS compares to traditional networking. Need the quick version? See what NaaS is explained simply →
Network as a Service (NaaS) is enterprise networking delivered as a managed subscription. You pay a predictable monthly fee; the provider delivers and operates the entire network — hardware, software, installation, monitoring, and support — including hardware refreshes.
It's a shift from ownership and DIY operations to outcomes and OpEx. Instead of large upfront hardware purchases (CapEx), separate installation and support contracts, and an internal team to maintain everything, you get one monthly bill, one SLA, and automatic updates and refreshes. The network stays current without IT project overhead.
This guide covers benefits, pricing models, how it stacks up against legacy networking, the leading providers, and use cases. For a shorter explanation of what NaaS is and how it works at a high level, see the definition guide →
The provider surveys your sites and designs coverage for the square footage, users, and devices you need — wired, wireless, and security.
They install and configure the hardware — switches, access points, controllers, firewalls — all of which they own, not you.
24/7 monitoring, software updates, and support are handled for you, with full visibility through a single cloud dashboard.
Hardware is refreshed and capacity scales as you grow — new sites, users, and devices come online at the same predictable rate.
Every provider draws the line in a slightly different place — what's bundled vs. optional varies. See what's generally included vs. add-on →
Trade six-figure hardware refreshes every 5–7 years for a flat monthly fee. The provider owns the gear and refreshes it inside the subscription, so a capital purchase never lands on your budget again.
Skilled network engineers are scarce and expensive. With NaaS, design, 24/7 monitoring, and support come bundled — the provider runs the network so a lean IT team doesn't have to.
Opening, refitting, or scaling a site? A NaaS provider designs, ships, and turns up coverage on a schedule — no procurement cycle, no juggling installers and licenses.
Hardware, software, install, and support collapse into a single monthly invoice and a single SLA — instead of five to eight vendors pointing at each other when something breaks.
Firmware, security patches, and capacity upgrades are the provider's job. The network stays on a modern, supported footing without a migration project on your side.
Add users, devices, or whole sites and the network grows at the same per-unit rate — no new CapEx project every time the company expands.
NaaS is billed monthly against a driver that scales with the size of your network. There's no single industry standard — providers choose the model that fits their stack — but nearly all roll hardware, installation, monitoring, support, and refresh into that one recurring rate. The three common models:
A flat rate per person on the network. Simple to budget and the fastest proxy for size — used by providers like Nile. Typical all-in managed pricing lands around $20–$29 per employee per month.
Priced to the area you're covering, which maps cleanly to how many access points and switches a space actually needs. Common with full-stack providers like Meter, often with ISP management folded in.
Priced to the count of managed devices — switches, APs, firewalls. Common with cloud-managed incumbents (Cisco Meraki, Juniper Mist, HPE Aruba) offered through subscription or consumption programs.
What moves your number up or down: number of sites and square footage, Wi-Fi density, security and compliance requirements, SLA tier, whether internet circuits are bundled, and contract length. The fastest way to a ballpark is to run your headcount through the pricing tool, then get an exact estimate from an advisor — free, no obligation.
| Traditional (buy & manage) | Network as a Service | |
|---|---|---|
| Cost structure | Large CapEx every refresh cycle | Predictable monthly OpEx |
| Hardware ownership | You buy, own, and depreciate it | Provider owns and maintains it |
| Who runs it | Your IT team or a separate MSP | The provider, as a service |
| Refreshes | Your project, every 5–7 years | Included in the subscription |
| Time to deploy | Procurement + install + config | Designed and turned up by the provider |
| Scaling | New purchase, new project | Add footprint at the same rate |
| Billing | Hardware, licenses, install, support — separate | One monthly bill, one SLA |
See the cost side-by-side on the NaaS vs. DIY comparison →
The market splits into dedicated NaaS players built around the subscription model from day one, and established networking vendors offering as-a-service or cloud-managed programs on top of their hardware. They differ on pricing model, how much they manage for you, and how security and connectivity are bundled.
Also in the landscape: HPE Aruba (via the GreenLake consumption model), Extreme Networks, and Ubiquiti UniFi for simpler environments. See every head-to-head comparison →
Talk to an independent advisor who knows every provider — no vendor pitch, no cost, no obligation.