Foundry has confirmed what many suspected was coming: perpetual maintenance is officially on its way out. From 1 January 2027, all active maintenance customers for Nuke Family, Mari and Katana will be converted to subscription plans at their next renewal. Renewals during 2026 will run as normal. After that, Foundry’s entire licensing structure will be subscription only, with no further perpetual updates. According to the company, this change “aligns Foundry with industry-standard licensing practices.”
Same price (for now), probably not for long
The company promises that 2027 renewals will start at the same price as current maintenance, with annual increases not exceeding five per cent. In other words, yes, prices technically stay the same, but you might want to assume that five percent rise is baked in. The subscription is available only on an annual or quarterly basis. For a full commercial licence, Foundry lists €3,139 per year, including taxes, or €1,719 per quarter, including taxes. Indie, student and non-commercial versions exist, but these are not viable for most studio use. Customers who decline to renew will retain their perpetual licences for the last supported version but lose access to updates, support and bug fixes.
A year to plan your escape route
Announcing the change a year early, Foundry’s Alex Foulds said the goal was to give customers “the time and information necessary for a smooth and predictable transition.” Smooth or not, 2026 now becomes the year to review budgets, check pipeline dependencies and decide whether subscription fits your studio strategy, or if you will freeze your perpetual licences at the last maintenance release.
Predictable transition, unpredictable reception
Foundry says a unified subscription model will “accelerate development and deliver more features and performance enhancements”. That statement has not been independently verified at press time. The real test will come when existing users renew in 2027 and see what value those new builds actually deliver.
Studios still running older versions of Nuke, Mari or Katana should check support timelines and network licence compatibility well before the end of 2026. Once maintenance lapses, Foundry’s technical support and update access will be gone.
Proceed with caution
Licensing transitions have a habit of exposing pipeline surprises. Test the subscription editions in controlled conditions before rollout and confirm version parity across render nodes, farm licences and DCC integrations. Because as of 2027, everyone, from the smallest comp shop to the biggest feature house, will be renting their Foundry tools. For good.