PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2065756
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2065756
According to Mordor Intelligence, the software as a service (SaaS) market size in 2026 is estimated at USD 435.41 billion, growing from the 2025 value of USD 370.4 billion, with 2031 projections showing USD 976.61 billion, growing at 17.55% CAGR over 2026-2031.

This report is Segmented by Deployment (Public Cloud, Private Cloud, Hybrid Cloud), Enterprises (SMEs, Large Enterprises), End-User Verticals (IT and Telecom, BFSI, Retail, Healthcare, Manufacturing, Other End-User Verticals), Geography (North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, Middle East and Africa). The Market Sizes and Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD) for all the Above Segments.
Cloud-native approaches replace monolithic software with containerized microservices orchestrated by Kubernetes, enabling continuous delivery and elastic scaling. Microsoft's USD 42.4 billion Q3 FY2025 cloud revenue, up 20% year over year, underlines enterprise appetite for cloud-first rebuilding. Freed from hardware constraints, companies spin up new environments in minutes, boosting developer velocity and service resilience. This architectural shift also fragments the SaaS market by lowering entry barriers for niche vendors that plug seamlessly into hyperscaler ecosystems. As multi-cloud tools mature, organizations diversify providers to avoid concentration risk while preserving best-of-breed innovation.
Post-pandemic, SMEs race to digitize front- and back-office functions to remain competitive. OECD research points to widening adoption gaps by size and sector, yet knowledge-intensive SMEs lead uptake. In China, SaaS spending hit CNY 58.1 billion in 2023, rising 23.1% despite macro softness. Budget-friendly SaaS subscriptions help SMEs bypass capital constraints, while AI-infused self-configuration trims onboarding effort. Vendors that bundle accounting, e-commerce, and marketing into unified dashboards gain traction as resource-strapped owners prioritize simplicity and ROI.
GDPR and a wave of state-level privacy laws compel providers to localize data, appoint Data Protection Officers, and pass rigorous audits. Compliance lifts costs and narrows hyperscaler location choices. Enterprises hedge by retaining sensitive workloads on-prem or in private clouds and selecting vendors with regional hosting frameworks.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
Public cloud continues to dominate the SaaS market with 89.42% share in 2025. Hybrid configurations, though, are projected to grow at 21.8% CAGR as firms pursue regulatory compliance and latency-sensitive use cases. Discover Financial Services uses Red Hat OpenShift on AWS to manage seasonal demand spikes and move workloads freely, mitigating vendor lock-in risk. The SaaS market size for hybrid solutions is set to widen as edge nodes enable real-time analytics in manufacturing and finance.
Enterprises blend public, private, and edge resources to balance cost against control. IndiGo Airline migrated 80% of operations to a multicloud estate spanning Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud within 18 months. The SaaS market benefits from this diversity, encouraging vendors to ship container-ready versions that run consistently across environments.
Large companies accounted for 58.05% of the SaaS market in 2025, attracted by unified suites that simplify global processes. Yet SMEs, forecast to expand at 19.2% CAGR, power the next growth wave. For this cohort the SaaS market size expands each year as subscription billing, guided onboarding, and AI-driven configuration remove technical barriers.
SMEs gravitate toward platforms offering accounting, sales, and HR in a single interface. OECD notes digital uptake remains uneven, prompting policy support for smaller firms. Vendors that invest in templates, partner ecosystems, and community learning lower the total cost of ownership and secure long-term loyalty.
North America held 42.60% of the SaaS market in 2025, benefitting from dense cloud infrastructure, robust cybersecurity standards, and capital access. Coca-Cola's USD 1.1 billion expansion of its Microsoft partnership illustrates enterprise-scale adoption of multi-cloud SaaS strategies. Regulatory fragmentation among US states does raise compliance overhead, but vendors respond with configurable privacy modules and regionally replicated data stores.
Asia-Pacific is projected to grow 18.7% annually to 2031, becoming the epicenter of SaaS market expansion. Rising internet penetration, mobile-first consumption, and government digitization programs drive adoption. China recorded CNY 58.1 billion SaaS sales in 2023 with 23.1% growth, underscoring untapped demand across manufacturing and consumer services. Local hyperscalers battle global incumbents by offering language-localized UI and region-specific compliance features.
Europe posts steady yet compliance-centric growth. GDPR and country-level data-protection acts compel vendors to maintain regional datacenters and invest in encryption innovations. Sustainability goals also influence procurement, with enterprises evaluating provider carbon footprints and requiring green-cloud disclosures. Vendors that certify renewable-powered facilities and transparent reporting gain competitive advantage.