Renewal of co-term in advance

Ulfen
Conversationalist

Renewal of co-term in advance

Hi

Is there a limit to when you can buy and activate a renewal license key? 

 

Licenses will not expire before the summer but customer have some money to spend. He basically asks if possible toi buy renewal licenses now, activate them as renewal now. Which in theory would add another year or three from expiry date.

 

I am correct? It is possible ? 🙂

 

I would rather sell a subscription which add more flexibility. A firm end date etc. But that's another story. You probably can't convert co-term to subscription now? 

 

Kind regards,

Ulf

5 Replies 5
alemabrahao
Kind of a big deal
Kind of a big deal

The Cisco Meraki Co-Termination licensing model works on the basis of co-termination, which means that for any given organization, regardless of how many licenses were applied or when they were applied, the license expiration date for all licenses claimed to that organization will be exactly the same. This is accomplished by averaging all active licenses together and dividing by the license limit count of devices in the organization.

 

if an organization had two separate Enterprise AP licenses, one license for 2x APs spanning one year (365 days) and another for 1x AP spanning five years (1,825 days). The co-termination value would be calculated as ((1825*1)+(365*2))/3= 851 days total for all three APs. So assuming all three licenses were applied on the same day, the organization would have a co-term date of 851 days from the start date of the licenses.

 

If the licenses were not applied at the same time, for example if the five-year license was applied halfway through the one-year license, the co-term calculation will take that into effect. In this case, the calculation would be ((1825*1)+(182*2))/3=730 days total for all three APs.

The organization co-termination date does not depend on the current device count, but rather the license limit. Removing devices from a network or organization will not impact the co-termination date.

To calculate how licenses impact each other in an organization, check out the License Calculator. To see a more detailed explanation and the exact calculations that are used to determine co-term dates, please refer to our detailed co-term explanation page.

 

License Start Date
Licenses in the Co-Termination model start consuming time from the date it was processed, not the date they are added to an organization.

Waiting to activate a license in the dashboard does not delay its activation date. There is no time benefit gained from delaying an activation.

 

https://documentation.meraki.com/Platform_Management/Product_Information/Licensing/Meraki_Co-Termina...

 

 

You cannot convert to subscription without migrating the entire organization to the per-device licensing model.

I am not a Cisco Meraki employee. My suggestions are based on documentation of Meraki best practices and day-to-day experience.

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Ulfen
Conversationalist

I know but the renewal process does not add anything but rather extend the dates. Like starting all over again.

alemabrahao
Kind of a big deal
Kind of a big deal

Renewing Your Dashboard Licensing
When a license key is applied using the Renew my Dashboard license operation, the organization’s licensing state updates to exactly match the device count of that license key, and any remaining time from previous licenses is kept and added to the new co-term date. For example, if an organization with licensing for 5x APs were to have a 2x AP, three-year license applied as a renewal, that organization would only be licensed for 2x APs for three years, plus the remaining time from prior to the renewal. In this instance, the organization would be 3x APs over the license limit, and therefore out of compliance.

The recommended practice for applying a renewal is to purchase a single license key that covers all devices currently in the organization for X number of years. Applying that license key as a renewal will then extend the organization’s co-term date by that many years while keeping the same license limit for devices.

Even if the organization is in compliance, (co-term date has not passed and the organization has not yet expired or been shut down,) the renewal license should still be applied immediately because the time on the license starts counting down from the date purchased.

Holding onto a license does not delay its activation date. There is no time benefit gained from delaying a renewal.

I am not a Cisco Meraki employee. My suggestions are based on documentation of Meraki best practices and day-to-day experience.

Please, if this post was useful, leave your kudos and mark it as solved.
pdeleuw
Building a reputation

Subscription licensing and per-device licensing are two different licensing models, which are not dependent to each other. Conversion to per-device licensing (PDL) is not possible any more, this licensing model is end-of-life. Existing orgs with PDL will have to migrate to subscription licensing.

If you have Co-term, which is the default licensing model, you can migrate to subscription licensing. It is possible, when the co-term ist expiring. Just order subsciptions and claim the licenses. The migration will occur automatically.

Ryan_Miles
Meraki Employee All-Star Meraki Employee All-Star
Meraki Employee All-Star

Simple answer is yes to your scenario. You can model this with the License Calculator tool.

 

Example, sample Org with MX, MS, MR. 200 days from expiration.

 

Screenshot 2025-11-19 at 08.24.45.png

 

Apply a 3 YR renewal for that exact gear and it adds 3 YRs to the co-term date.

 

Screenshot 2025-11-19 at 08.25.43.png

 

You can convert an Org to subscriptions. But any remaining co-term time is not carried over. So you really only want to do such a conversion when the co-term period is near expiration.

 

https://documentation.meraki.com/Platform_Management/Product_Information/Licensing/Converting_Meraki... 

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