Veeam Backup & Replication is deeply embedded in enterprise infrastructure. It's also one of those products that teams install, configure, and then don't touch for years — which is exactly how EOL versions accumulate.
Veeam 11 reached end of support on February 1, 2025. Veeam 12.0 reached end of support on February 1, 2026. Both are now unsupported.
If you open a Veeam support ticket on either version today, Veeam may require you to upgrade before providing assistance.
Veeam B&R EOL Schedule
| Version | End of Support | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Veeam 9.5 | Jan 1, 2022 | ❌ EOL |
| Veeam 10 | Feb 1, 2023 | ❌ EOL |
| Veeam 11 | Feb 1, 2025 | ❌ EOL |
| Veeam 12.0 | Feb 1, 2026 | ❌ EOL |
| Veeam 12.1 | TBD | ✅ Supported |
Veeam follows an N-2 support policy: only the two most recent major versions receive full technical support.
EOL Risk Score for Veeam 11: 79 Critical
View full score → endoflife.ai/score/veeam-backup-and-replication/11
The Problem Nobody Talks About: Hypervisor Compatibility
Running EOL Veeam isn't just a security concern — it's an operational risk.
Veeam regularly releases compatibility updates for:
- New VMware vSphere builds
- Hyper-V releases
- Windows Server versions
- Storage array firmware
Without these updates, your backup jobs may begin failing silently as your hypervisor or storage infrastructure is updated separately.
Veeam 11 was never updated to support VMware vSphere 8 U3 or later. If your vSphere environment has been updated since Veeam 11's EOL date, you may be operating with an officially unsupported hypervisor/backup combination — one that could fail during a restore when you need it most.
Compliance Implications
Backup software occupies a unique position in compliance frameworks:
- SOC 2 — backup integrity and recovery capability are tested controls
- ISO 27001 — backup procedures and their testing are explicit requirements (Annex A.8.13)
- PCI DSS — backup systems are in scope for security requirements
Running EOL backup software generates findings under all three. Auditors are increasingly aware that EOL software means unpatched CVEs — and when that software controls your disaster recovery capability, the severity of the finding is elevated.
Document your Veeam version, its EOL date, and your upgrade timeline before your next audit. Auditors expect to see this tracked — not discovered during the audit.
What Changed in Veeam 12.1
Veeam 12.1 (December 2023) added:
- Malware detection using inline entropy analysis and YARA rules
- Expanded cloud integration (S3-compatible object storage)
- Improved Linux proxy support
- SureBackup improvements for automated recovery verification
This is the only fully supported release in the v12 family.
Upgrade Path: Veeam In-Place Upgrade
Veeam supports direct in-place upgrades between major versions.
Pre-upgrade checklist:
- Ensure all jobs complete or are stopped
- Verify SQL Server version — Veeam 12.1 requires SQL Server 2014 SP2 or later
- Confirm all proxy and repository servers are online
- Check OS compatibility — Windows Server 2012 R2 is not supported for the VBR server in v12.1
- Run the Veeam Upgrade Checker before proceeding
After the upgrade: always run SureBackup to verify backup recoverability. A successful Veeam upgrade is not a confirmed working backup. A successful restore is.
Check What You're Protecting Too
Veeam protects your Windows Server, VMware, and Linux workloads — but those workloads have their own EOL dates. Check the EOL status of the systems in your backup scope at endoflife.ai/checker.
Full article with EOL Risk Scores for every Veeam version: endoflife.ai/article-veeam-eol
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