
Perpetual Windows Server 2025 Standard with 24-core MAK activation and 100-user scope—Lizensa digital delivery, EU SME licensing clarity, invoice trail, and activation support.
Najnižja cena v zadnjih 30 dneh: 69,90 € (dne 6/7/2026)
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Licenčni ključ + navodila za aktivacijo v jeziku vašega OS. Priložen PDF račun z DDV.
Vsak ključ preverimo na proizvajalčevih aktivacijskih strežnikih, preden ga pošljemo.
Podpora po e-pošti ali klepetu odgovori v vašem jeziku v eni uri v delovnem času EU. Pomagali vam bomo ali zamenjali ključ.
Buying server licensing from a random marketplace tab is how audits meet spreadsheets that nobody can defend. Windows Server 2025 Standard on a 24-core scope with MAK-style activation and a 100-user commercial tier is for teams that already counted cores, already know Standard versus Datacenter, and still need a perpetual platform activation path that matches their paperwork—not a vague “server key” that might belong to another channel entirely. Lizensa writes for EU operators who need intelligible listings, delivery you can attach to CapEx, and help when activation telemetry disagrees with your NIC swap notes—without turning a volume tier into implied rights you never purchased. When finance or a works council asks for plain language, keep activation scope, CAL boundaries, and hardware assumptions in one traceable procurement narrative.
This product is not Microsoft Azure consumption, not a Microsoft 365 tenant seat pack, not Client Access Licenses (CALs) bundled by magic, not Remote Desktop Services entitlements, not SQL Server cores, and not a promise that Microsoft will host your backups. It is Windows Server 2025 Standard delivered through the MAK model described for this listing, aligned to the 24-core processor footprint and the 100-user purchase tier shown at checkout.
Because CAL math trips up even careful SMBs, plan companions early: compare Windows Server 2025 Standard (16-core) when you are still choosing base OS licensing separately, Windows Server 2025 Datacenter (16-core) when virtualization density—not single-host savings—is the economic driver, and Windows Server 2025 User CAL — 50 or Device CAL packs when employees or shared kiosks touch AD-backed services. If you are deciding whether to stay on the prior generation, glance at Windows Server 2022 Standard (16-core)—then return here if 2025 stays approved. The full assortment lives under the Windows Server category.
You receive licensing positioned for Windows Server 2025 Standard with the 24-core basis this SKU advertises and the MAK 100-user commercial variant selected in the cart. Standard edition is the everyday workhorse: Active Directory in many SMEs, disciplined file shares, modest Hyper-V hosts where density does not yet justify Datacenter economics, print and patch orchestration, and the TLS-hardened SMB world your compliance consultants keep referencing.
Expect to engineer CAL coverage separately unless a different bundle explicitly says otherwise. MAK activation is an administrative contract with your activation ledger—how many servers burned a successful online handshake, when keys rotated, which contractor laptops accidentally attempted activation from a guest VLAN. Lizensa gives you a trustworthy storefront narrative; your runbooks still need owners.
Layer realistic SME economics on top: every hour you spend re‑imaging a domain controller because someone leaked a key in Slack costs more than buying the CAL packs correctly the first time. That is why Lizensa cross-links User CAL and Device CAL products explicitly—we want finance, IT, and external auditors to read the same sentence about access rights. File OS activation, CAL purchases, and RDS validation evidence in the same CapEx record without folding in unrelated productivity bundles.
Finally, treat service accounts and backup operators as identity assets: anyone who can elevate on the server can also reshape the activation story you will later defend. Rotation policies for break-glass admin accounts belong in the same workbook as MAK consumption notes—Lizensa sells the licence, your security steering group still owns who touches it.
Windows Server 2025 carries forward a modern security baseline, improved storage stacks, better alignment with Azure Arc–style management when you adopt hybrid tooling, and continued refinement of roles SMEs lean on—Hyper-V, clustered files, DNS, DHCP, certificate services, and the occasional Remote Desktop deployment whose RDS CAL story is still a second invoice. Compared to 2022, the conversation is less “flashy feature drops” and more lifecycle posture: patch strategy, firmware cadence, and whether your LOB vendor certified against 2025 yet.
Choose Standard when virtualization rights up to two OSEs (when you fully license the host per Microsoft’s rules for Standard) cover your intent, and when Datacenter’s broader VM rights would waste budget. Choose Datacenter when you are stacking many Windows guests on one hardware platform—see Windows Server 2025 Datacenter before you standardize the wrong edition. Lizensa will not shortcut that arithmetic; we would rather you reject a mismatched SKU than fight procurement later.
The 100-user MAK tier in commerce language is still not a substitute for HR headcount: contractors, seasonal staff, and kiosk workers each trigger different CAL counting habits—walk through a lunch-hour whiteboard session before you lock procurement.
| Item | Guidance | | --- | --- | | Edition | Windows Server 2025 Standard | | Cores | License all physical cores (minimums apply—confirm against Microsoft core licensing tables for your hardware) | | Memory | Scale with roles; Hyper-V hosts rarely stop at 32 GB | | Storage | Fast OS volume plus isolation for data, logs, backup targets | | Network | Reliable uplinks for MAK activation endpoints and update services | | CALs | Plan Windows Server CALs for users/devices accessing services | | RDS | Separate RDS CAL licensing when presenting full desktops or RemoteApps beyond admin RDP |
Treat documentation like a controls matrix: which VLAN hosts the KMS/MAK notes, who owns BitLocker recovery, where WSUS or Windows Update for Business rings live.
| Track | Strength | Friction | | --- | --- | --- | | Standard 24-core MAK (100 tier) | Predictable perpetual OS activations at SME scale | Requires CAL discipline | | Datacenter 24-core | Dense Windows VMs on one metal footprint | Higher licence cost | | Azure IaaS | Fleet elasticity & capex shift | Ongoing metered spend | | Staying on 2022 | Vendor certs may still lag on 2025 | Opportunity cost of newer security stack |
MAK suits teams that can log activations and keep keys out of chat apps. If you cannot, consider programmes with tighter entitlement tracking—even if the headline price looks higher.
Hybrid footprints add another lens: some SMEs keep directory services on-prem while mail lives in Exchange Online—totally workable, but your CAL and subscription boundaries must stay explicit in onboarding docs. Lizensa will not auto-map those hybrids; we point you to Windows Server 2025 Datacenter when guest counts explode, and to Windows Server 2022 Standard when a vendor still hides behind “we only tested 2022” release notes.
If activation fails, collect exact error codes, proxy paths, and recent motherboard or NIC swaps—MAK surprises often correlate with hardware identity changes.
Document “who clicked Activate” with the same rigour as badge access: if two administrators both imported keys during a migration weekend, your future self wants a dated log, not a mystery .txt on a USB stick. When DR tests involve cloning VMs, confirm whether cloning triggers reactivation under your channel’s rules before declaring victory in the runbook.
No. CALs remain a separate purchase dimension. Pair with User CAL packs or Device CAL packs as your access pattern dictates.
Treat them as different concepts. The 100-user MAK tier describes the commercial bundle for this product key lineage; CALs govern who may access server services. Your paperwork should show both if both apply.
No. Standard includes limited virtualization rights when properly licensed—validate against Microsoft’s edition tables before you stack guests.
No. Hybrid benefit and Azure linkage are your tenant relationship with Microsoft—this page does not migrate VMs automatically.
Stay on Windows Server 2022 Standard for that workload until certifications catch up—do not improvise production support.
No. Interactive remote desktop workloads typically need RDS CALs such as RDS User CAL bundles—confirm scope with your project plan.
Treat event logs, access traces, and backup locations as records subject to GDPR where applicable—Lizensa supplies licensing commerce; your DPO defines retention and lawfulness.
Purchase orders, activation logs, CAL invoices, hardware asset IDs, and change tickets for major role deployments.
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