Salesforce licensing has changed dramatically over the last two years. Rising software-as-a-service prices are putting pressure on IT, procurement, and SAM teams. New AI-based licensing models add more pressure. More complex enterprise agreements make the pressure worse.
For many organizations, the challenge is no longer just managing SaaS applications and tracking usage patterns. Controlling long-term costs while still enabling innovation.
Salesforce pricing pressure has increased sharply. After a seven-year price freeze, Salesforce raised list prices by 9% in 2023. In August 2025, it raised prices again by 6%.
The increase applied to Enterprise and Unlimited editions. It covered core products like Sales Cloud and Service Cloud. It also included Field Service and Industry Clouds. Analysts expect another 5–7% increase in 2026.
At the same time, Salesforce is expanding premium offerings like Agentforce, Data 360 and MuleSoft. Many older Salesforce Enterprise License Agreement (SELA) contracts are also expiring, which may raise costs. Organizations may face higher à la carte prices and new add-ons.
The biggest risk is visibility. Many companies still do not know which cloud services are in active use.
They may not know which users need premium features. They may not know which add-ons bring clear value. They also may not know the long-term cost of AI and data use.
Without this insight, renewals become reactive. That weakens your negotiation position and increases the chance of overspending.
One of the biggest changes in 2025 was the introduction of the Agentic Enterprise License Agreement (AELA). Unlike traditional usage-based AI pricing, AELA offers a flat fee for unlimited use. It covers services like Agentforce, Data 360, MuleSoft, and selected Slack capabilities.
For Salesforce customers, the appeal is obvious. Instead of paying for each AI interaction, API call, or automation, organizations sign a fixed agreement. The agreement lasts for multiple years.
Costs stay predictable. CIOs gain budget certainty, while business teams can scale AI adoption without worrying about overage charges.
But AELA also changes the balance of power.
The model aims to speed up customer use of Salesforce AI services. It also builds long-term reliance on the Salesforce ecosystem. Once AI agents, automations, and enterprise data pipelines become business-critical, it gets much harder to cut usage. Switching providers also becomes far more difficult.
That creates a new negotiation challenge: today’s predictable pricing can become tomorrow’s renewal trap.
Organizations evaluating AELA should focus on more than short-term savings.
Key questions include:
How much AI usage do you expect over the next two to three years?
Do you have transparency into actual Agentforce and Data 360 consumption?
What protections exist at renewal?
Can you reduce scope if adoption slows?
How dependent will core business processes become on Salesforce AI services?
Without clear governance, “unlimited” usage can also drive uncontrolled growth. Departments may launch overlapping AI initiatives simply because the usage appears free under the agreement.
To avoid this, enterprises should negotiate detailed usage reporting, renewal caps and flexibility clauses before signing. Maintaining internal governance around AI deployments and continuing to evaluate alternative AI platforms are also important to preserve long-term negotiating leverage.
AELA can absolutely accelerate innovation and simplify AI budgeting. But organizations should approach these agreements strategically, with strong controls around visibility, flexibility and renewal protection.
👉 A strong Salesforce optimization strategy starts long before renewal discussions begin.
👉 Review actual usage data throughout the year, not just before contract renewal. Identify inactive users, underused products and unnecessary add-ons early.
👉 Many organizations discover they are paying for high-tier licenses that employees rarely use. Aligning license types with real business needs can significantly reduce costs.
👉 Start renewal discussions at least 12 months before a SELA or AELA expires. Salesforce negotiations favor customers who prepare early and arrive with data.
👉 External price benchmarks can also strengthen your position. If comparable organizations pay less for similar environments, use that information during negotiations.
Negotiate:
Caps on annual price increases
Product-level reduction rights
Flexible renewal terms
Transparency into AI and consumption-based usage
These clauses can prevent major cost spikes later.
Data 360 introduces another important cost driver: data volume. Without governance, storage and processing costs can grow quickly.
Establish clear policies for data ingestion, credit consumption monitoring, integration usage and data retention. Managing data usage proactively helps avoid hidden costs and keeps AI projects sustainable.
Effective license management does more than reduce costs. It also improves compliance, strengthens security and helps teams work more efficiently.
With centralized visibility into licenses, subscriptions and usage patterns, organizations can make smarter renewal decisions and avoid last-minute surprises.
USU SaaS Management helps enterprises monitor Salesforce usage over time. It optimizes license allocation and supports complex SELA or AELA negotiations. It provides reliable data and actionable insights.
The result: lower spend, stronger negotiating power and better business value from every Salesforce investment.