When cloud-only isn’t realistic: why hybrid desktop strategies are back

For many UK IT leaders, “cloud-only” desktop strategies sounded like the inevitable destination just a few years ago. Azure Virtual Desktop (AVD), Windows 365, and other DaaS platforms promised simplified management, lower CAPEX, and agile access for users everywhere.

But in the real world, a pure cloud-only model isn’t always achievable… at least not overnight. Instead, hybrid desktop strategies are emerging as the practical, strategic way to modernise end-user computing without forcing organisations to rip and replace what still works today.

The reason is simple: organisations are diverse, and their constraints are real.

Legacy systems, compliance, performance, and on-prem dependencies still matter

Many enterprises still run mission-critical applications and data in their own datacentres or on specialised infrastructure. These workloads may be latency-sensitive, bound by regulatory or data-sovereignty requirements, or tightly coupled to on-premises systems that can’t be migrated quickly. Legacy VDI platforms like Citrix, Omnissa, or other traditional stacks often sit at the heart of these ecosystems—not because teams are resistant to change, but because those environments simply support business needs in ways cloud-only options cannot yet replicate.

For these organisations, abandoning all on-premises infrastructure for a cloud-only VDI doesn’t make sense, even if cloud desktops are directionally where they want to be. Migration projects can be long, costly, and disruptive, especially when applications and estates are tightly integrated.

Microsoft’s response has been to evolve AVD itself.

Cloud-centric management, on-premises execution: what AVD hybrid delivers

At Microsoft Ignite 2025, Microsoft announced Azure Virtual Desktop for hybrid environments, a significant expansion of AVD that lets organisations run AVD session hosts on-premises infrastructure via Azure Arc in addition to running in Azure or Azure Local.

In practice, AVD hybrid gives IT teams the ability to:

  • Use existing on-premises infrastructure, including Hyper-V, VMware vSphere, Nutanix AHV, or other Arc-connected environments as AVD session hosts.
  • Keep sensitive data local for compliance or sovereignty requirements while still using Azure’s unified control plane.
  • Run latency-sensitive workloads on-premises where performance matters while still centrally managing the environment through the cloud.
  • Phase legacy VDI migrations on your terms instead of forcing a big-bang cutover.

Rather than asking IT teams to choose between “all cloud” and “all on-premises,” AVD hybrid creates a third option: cloud-managed desktops with execution wherever it makes sense. This flexibility helps organisations balance risk, continuity, and long-term transformation in a way that aligns with their unique timelines and constraints.

Hybrid isn’t a compromise. It’s a bridge to the cloud

This hybrid model goes beyond solving today’s blockers and future-proofs the organisation and acts as a long-term bridge to the cloud. By centralising management in Azure while preserving on-premises investments where needed, hybrid AVD enables phased migration, improved governance, and a consistent user experience.

For example:

  • Organisations with strict compliance requirements can retain sensitive workloads on local infrastructure while still benefiting from cloud-centric identity, security, and management controls.
  • Teams supporting performance-critical applications can keep session hosts close to the backend systems users depend on, avoiding latency concerns.
  • IT leaders no longer need to maintain legacy VDI control planes (and their associated costs) while they plan longer-term modernisation.

And importantly, this strategy gives IT teams breathing room to grow cloud skills at their own pace, a practical benefit when resource scarcity is already top of mind.

Why management matters in hybrid environments

Hybrid desktops introduce flexibility. But without unified tooling, they can also introduce complexity. Organisations need consistent automation, lifecycle management, policy enforcement, cost optimisation, and monitoring, whether desktops are running in Azure, on Azure Local, or on-premises via AVD hybrid.

This is where an automated management layer plays a major role in turning hybrid flexibility into operational simplicity.

If your organisation is navigating the reality that cloud-only isn’t realistic right now (but cloud-enabled, hybrid desktops are), learn more about Azure Virtual Desktop for hybrid environments and how modern EUC strategies bridge on-premises and cloud without disruption.