A transparent pricing guide for legacy system modernization based on 500+ projects we have delivered. Real numbers, not marketing ranges — $40K–$100K for simple builds, $400K–$500K+ for enterprise scale.
| Tier | Price Range | Timeline | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| UI Modernization | $40K–$100K | 8–16 weeks | New frontend on existing backend, API wrapper around legacy, improved UX without core changes. |
| Re-Platforming | $100K–$250K | 16–32 weeks | Migrate to modern stack, containerization, cloud deployment, database migration, and new integrations. |
| Re-Architecture | $250K–$400K | 8–14 months | Decompose monolith into microservices, event-driven architecture, modern data layer, and new frontend. |
| Full Rebuild | $400K–$500K+ | 12–18+ months | Complete ground-up rebuild with modern architecture, zero-downtime migration, and feature parity. |
Same starting point: 15-year-old business-critical system, 50 users, 200 integrations touch points. Indicative 2026 US/EU numbers over a 5-year horizon.
$50K–$150K/yr in ops, patches, and incident response = $250K–$750K over 5 years. Rises sharply if talent for the old stack dries up. Wins only when the system is stable and the business has no growth plans for it.
$100K–$250K in years 1–2 + $30K–$60K/yr steady state = $250K–$500K over 5 years. Lowest-risk path. Pays back vs keep-and-maintain around year 3 once the legacy ops overhead drops.
$250K–$500K+ in years 1–2 with high abandonment risk, then lower ops. Total 5-year cost is similar to strangler-fig in the best case but 2–3x in the 40–60% of projects that slip or get shelved.
$50K–$200K implementation + $100K–$400K/yr licensing at scale = $550K–$2M over 5 years. Wins when a vendor fits >70% of the need and compliance is tractable; loses when the system encodes unique IP or non-standard workflows.
Quick answer: Legacy system modernization costs $40,000–$500,000+ depending on system age, complexity, and modernization strategy. A UI modernization costs $40K–$100K. A phased re-platforming runs $100K–$250K. Full system re-architecture costs $250K–$500K+. Want a tailored estimate? Talk to us →
A 10K-line monolith is manageable. A 500K-line system with decades of business logic encoded in code requires extensive analysis and careful migration — doubling or tripling costs.
Well-documented systems are cheaper to modernize. Undocumented systems require reverse engineering, which adds $15K–$50K for business logic discovery.
Clean relational data is straightforward. Legacy databases with denormalized schemas, stored procedures, and data quality issues add $15K–$40K for migration and cleansing.
Systems that can have a maintenance window are cheaper to migrate. Zero-downtime requirements with the strangler fig pattern add $20K–$50K for parallel running.
Each legacy integration (files, SOAP, direct DB connections) that needs modernization adds $5K–$15K for API wrapping or replacement.
Maintaining SOX, HIPAA, or industry compliance during modernization adds $10K–$30K for audit trail continuity and revalidation.
System audit, business logic documentation, risk assessment, migration strategy
Target architecture, technology selection, data model, integration design
Phased migration, API wrappers, service extraction, data migration
Regression testing, data validation, performance benchmarking, UAT
Final cutover, legacy decommission, monitoring, team training
Practical steps we use with clients to control scope and spend.
Plan for discovery, a realistic MVP, and a 15–20% contingency before you lock a number for legacy system modernization. Scope changes and integrations are where estimates drift — we help you sequence work so you fund value in the right order.
Ranges reflect a re-platforming modernization: strangler-fig migration of a 10–15 year-old business-critical system to a modern stack, API wrappers, phased data migration, and regression test harness.
| Vendor Type | Typical Cost | Timeline | Risk Profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Freelance / dev collective | $40K–$130K | 5–12 months | Very high — legacy archaeology, characterization testing, and compliance preservation rarely handled well; abandonment risk high |
| Offshore systems integrator (IN/PH/UA) | $60K–$200K | 8–14 months | Medium — cost advantage offset by weak tribal-knowledge capture, legacy-stack shortages (COBOL, Delphi, VB6), and compliance gaps |
| Boutique modernization specialist (ZTABS tier) | $100K–$280K | 6–12 months | Low — senior engineers, strangler-fig discipline, characterization tests before changes, compliance-aware |
| Big 4 consultancy (Accenture, Deloitte, IBM) | $300K–$1M+ | 10–18 months | Low on delivery risk, very high on cost — heavy PMO, 40–60% failure rate on big-bang rewrites; subcontracted build teams |
| SaaS replacement vendor (when a vendor fits the use case) | $50K–$200K implementation | 4–9 months | Low on build risk but high on fit risk — compliance revalidation and workflow-match gaps often surface after signing |
Ranges are 2026 US-buyer benchmarks; parallel-running costs (double infrastructure during migration), knowledge-transfer time from senior staff, and compliance revalidation (SOX, HIPAA, FDA) add $100K–$500K+ regardless of vendor path. Big-bang rewrites fail 40–60% of the time per industry experience — strangler-fig is typically the lower-risk approach.
Honest scenarios where the numbers above are the wrong benchmark for your situation.
If the legacy platform runs, meets SLAs, and the business has no new feature demand, the right move is "do nothing and budget the maintenance." Modernizing a stable system with no pain signal burns $100K+ to replace a working one. Wait for a real forcing function.
Modernizing a ghost-system is 2–3x more expensive than planned because every decision is reverse-engineering. Before committing to a rebuild, spend 4–8 weeks and $20K–$50K documenting current behavior with automated characterization tests. Skip that and you will ship a "modern" system with new bugs and missing business rules.
Big-bang rewrites have a famously bad track record (Netscape, Second System Effect). Strangler-fig in-place modernization succeeds far more often and lets the business keep running. If the executive team insists on big-bang, document the risks in writing before signing.
SOX, HIPAA, or FDA validation of the current platform took years and 6–7 figures. A modernization that breaks validation puts you back in that cycle. Factor in revalidation cost ($100K–$500K+) before comparing modernization options.
Real build-vs-buy options with pricing signals and the honest gotcha each one carries.
| Alternative | Best For | Pricing Signal | Biggest Gotcha |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strangler-fig pattern (incremental replacement behind a facade) | Mission-critical systems, 18–36 month window, low-risk tolerance | $100K–$400K+ over 40–80 weeks at $140–$240/hr | Strangler-fig requires ongoing dual-run discipline. Without test automation, drift between legacy and new system causes regression after regression. |
| Big-bang rewrite (parallel build then cutover) | Contained systems, clear spec, 12–18 month window, senior team | $150K–$500K+ over 30–60 weeks at $140–$240/hr | Big-bang failures are spectacular. Industry data: ~30% of large rewrites overrun budget by >50%; ~10% never ship. Only attempt with executive alignment on risk. |
| SaaS replacement (just buy a product that does it) | Standard process, 80% workflow fit, fast ROI case | SaaS $30–$300/user/mo + $30K–$200K migration | Data migration is usually 40–60% of SaaS replacement cost — not the license. Legacy schemas rarely map cleanly to SaaS data models. |
| Keep-and-maintain (COBOL-on-life-support pattern) | Systems with stable scope, no regulatory pressure, retiring workforce risk acceptable | $200K–$600K/yr in specialist labor + hardware refresh every 4–5 years | Specialist talent is aging out. In 5–10 years the labor market for COBOL / AS/400 / legacy Delphi will be unaffordable or unavailable. |
Client planned a 12-week DB migration off Oracle. Discovery found 140+ undocumented PL/SQL triggers encoding business rules. Scope doubled to 26 weeks and $180K. Always audit stored procedures + triggers before fixed-pricing a DB migration.
Strangler-fig kept legacy + new system running in parallel. Infra cost was 2× budget for 14 months ($18K/mo vs. $9K/mo). Plan dual-run TCO as (legacy OPS + new system) × runway, not just the new system.
Big-bang cutover planned for 14 hours; hit 38 hours due to data reconciliation errors. Business impact $180K in lost orders + SLA penalties. Always pre-rehearse cutovers at full data volume on a staging mirror.
Share your goals and timeline — we will map scope, options, and a clear investment range.
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