Legacy Windchill license renewals will end after September 30, 2026. This announcement from PTC follows the news that support for Windchill version 13 ends in June 2027 (version 12 support ended in 2024). For engineering and IT leaders, this deadline represents far more than just a routine software upgrade. It's a strategic inflection point that demands a clear decision - and soon.
Whether your organization has relied on Windchill for two years or twenty, the path forward requires careful planning. Here's what you need to understand about your options, the risks of waiting, and how to approach this transition with confidence.
Let's address the most common misconception first: this isn't a situation where inaction is a viable strategy. PTC's shift is part of a deliberate move to transition customers to ePLM role-based licensing, align deployments with cloud-ready architectures, and accelerate adoption of Windchill+ (their SaaS PLM offering).
Every Windchill customer must now choose a path forward. The only question is which one and when you start.
For most companies, this isn't simply a licensing change. Windchill environments tend to accumulate years of customizations, integrations with ERP and CAD tools, and embedded business processes that aren't easy to untangle.
That means most transitions involve:
Companies that struggle most with PLM transitions are those that underestimate the preparation required.
If a migration effort is unavoidable, regardless of which path you choose, it raises a natural question: why rebuild within the same ecosystem?
Staying with PTC by moving to Windchill+ means accepting a subscription cost model and SaaS limitations that restrict the very customizations your team has relied on.
That's why some organizations are treating 2026 not as a migration deadline, but as a platform reset; a chance to move to something better suited to how they work today.
The most direct path is migrating to Windchill+, PTC's SaaS offering. This keeps your organization within the PTC ecosystem while transitioning to a managed, cloud-hosted environment.
This option is best for organizations satisfied with Windchill today, teams committed to PTC's long-term roadmap, and companies pursuing a SaaS-first IT strategy.
Key Benefits:
- Managed infrastructure with automatic upgrades
- Continuity of existing Windchill processes
- Alignment with PTC's innovation roadmap
What to Consider:
Windchill+ operates with SaaS guardrails, meaning customization flexibility is reduced. Organizations with heavily configured environments will need to review and rationalize those customizations before migration. This is a multi-phase transformation, not a simple lift-and-shift.
For organizations whose primary PLM need is managing CAD files and engineering documents, particularly those running SOLIDWORKS, a right-sizing move may actually be the smartest option.
This option is best for engineering teams using SOLIDWORKS CAD, organizations seeking lower cost and administrative overhead, and companies that don't require a full enterprise PLM footprint.
SOLIDWORKS PDM and SOLIDWORKS Manage are tightly integrated with the tools your engineers use daily. Unlike Windchill, which was designed as an enterprise system that engineering teams were expected to adapt to, PDM and Manage are built around the SOLIDWORKS workflow, making adoption faster, administration simpler, and daily usage more intuitive.

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Key Benefits:
What to Consider:
These platforms are not full enterprise PLM solutions. If your organization requires advanced lifecycle management, regulatory compliance workflows, or multi-domain collaboration, this path may not scale to those needs.
That said, for many mid-sized manufacturers, this is a practical and intelligent right-sizing decision, not a downgrade.
As we stated earlier, some organizations will use this moment as a catalyst to evaluate competing enterprise PLM platforms. Dassault Systèmes' 3DEXPERIENCE CLOUD PLM (also known as ENOVIA) is the most common alternative for companies seeking comparable or expanded capabilities.
This option is best for organizations requiring enterprise-grade PLM, companies pursuing a digital thread or digital twin strategy, and businesses needing cross-domain collaboration across engineering, manufacturing, and supply chain.
Unlike Windchill+, which is PTC's existing on-premise platform adapted for SaaS delivery, 3DEXPERIENCE was built cloud-native from the ground up. That distinction matters when you're evaluating long-term platform trajectory.

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Key Benefits:
What to Consider:
Platform transitions of this scale require process redesign, data re-architecture, and substantial change management investment. This path is best approached as a deliberate strategic transformation, not a reactive one.
Connect your existing legacy Windchill to a more modern PLM solution, allowing Windchill to continue operating in the background. Keeping your integrations and release processes in place as you bridge the gap or transition to a new long-term PLM solution. This mitigates risks of a big bang migration strategy but does introduce additional IT burden for integration and coexistence strategies.

This option is best for organizations with heavily customized Windchill environments, companies that need time to build internal readiness, and businesses that want to defer a full platform decision while still addressing the 2026 deadline.
Key Benefits:
What to Consider:
This approach adds temporary architectural complexity and requires a clear long-term roadmap to avoid prolonged limbo. The goal is a controlled transition, not indefinite deferral.
No two organizations will have the same answer, and the right choice depends on a clear-eyed assessment of your specific situation:
| Factor | Why It Matters |
| Customization depth | Heavily configured environments require more rework, regardless of platform |
| Integration landscape | ERP, MES, and CAD integrations may need re-architecting |
| Regulatory requirements | Compliance workflows may limit platform flexibility |
| Data quality and structure | Clean data is the foundation of any successful migration |
| IT and cloud strategy | SaaS adoption has organizational implications beyond PLM |
| Long-term business objectives | The right platform today should still be the right platform in 10 years |
A common mistake is letting urgency drive the decision. The September 2026 deadline is real, but committing to the wrong platform (or starting migration without proper preparation) can create far more cost and disruption than the deadline itself.
Across every path, one truth holds: the success of your transition depends more on preparation than platform choice.
Before committing to any direction, the most valuable first step is a structured assessment that covers:
Organizations that invest in this step before making platform decisions consistently achieve faster migrations, lower costs, and better long-term outcomes.
The 2026 deadline is creating pressure... but it's also creating opportunity. Start your assessment now. Organizations that begin this process earliest will have the most options (and the least disruption) when September 2026 arrives.

When the time comes to choose your path and execute your migration, having the right partner makes all the difference. GoEngineer has a dedicated team for handling the complexity of real-world PLM transitions - including migrations out of Windchill. Our data experts will assess the current state of your environment, identify risk areas, and map out the exact path forward.
About GoEngineer
GoEngineer delivers software, technology, and expertise that enable companies to unlock design innovation and deliver better products faster. With more than 40 years of experience and tens of thousands of customers in high tech, medical, machine design, energy and other industries, GoEngineer provides best-in-class design solutions from SOLIDWORKS CAD, Stratasys 3D printing, Creaform & Artec 3D scanning, CAMWorks, PLM, and more
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