Skip to content
Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from tastytech.

    What's Hot

    This Isn’t The First Time PlayStation (And Others) Tried To Kill Used Games

    July 10, 2026

    Dakota & Elle Fanning’s New War Movie Based On Novel Sets 2027 Release Date

    July 10, 2026

    G-POWER GP-480 Upgrade Pushes The BMW B58 Engine to 480 HP

    July 10, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    tastytech.intastytech.in
    Subscribe
    • AI News & Trends
    • Tech News
    • AI Tools
    • Business & Startups
    • Guides & Tutorials
    • Tech Reviews
    • Automobiles
    • Gaming
    • movies
    tastytech.intastytech.in
    Home»AI Tools»Azure Unmanaged Disks Retirement: How to Tell If You’re at Risk Before End of March 2026
    Azure Unmanaged Disks Retirement: How to Tell If You’re at Risk Before End of March 2026
    AI Tools

    Azure Unmanaged Disks Retirement: How to Tell If You’re at Risk Before End of March 2026

    gvfx00@gmail.comBy gvfx00@gmail.comFebruary 19, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Table of Contents

    Toggle
    • TL;DR
    • Architecture Diagram
    • Table of Contents
    • Scenario
    • What Is Actually Retiring
    • Key Challenges
    • Quick Risk Assessment
      • Fastest check in the Azure Portal
      • Cross-subscription inventory with Azure Resource Graph
      • PowerShell spot-check
    • Decision Criteria
    • Architecture Tradeoff Matrix
    • Failure Domain Analysis
    • Change Management Considerations
    • Summary and Takeaways
    • Conclusion
      • Next Post
    • Sources
      • Like this:
      • Related posts:
    • Nestle accused of risking baby heath in Africa, Asia and Latin America | Food News
    • Bolivia declares state of emergency amid blockade crisis | Government News
    • Nearly 66,000 Afghans displaced amid fierce fighting on Pakistan border: UN | Conflict News

    TL;DR

    • If any Azure IaaS VM in your estate still uses unmanaged disks, it is on a hard clock: after March 31, 2026 those VMs can’t be started, and running or allocated ones are stopped and deallocated.
    • Your fastest reality check is the Azure Portal VM list: add the Uses managed disks column/filter and set it to No.
    • Treat this like a production change program, not a “click-and-go” task:
      • inventory across subscriptions
      • identify maintenance windows
      • validate dependencies (IPs, availability sets, monitoring, backups)
      • schedule conversions in batches

    Architecture Diagram

    Table of Contents

    • Scenario
    • What Is Actually Retiring
    • Key Challenges
    • Quick Risk Assessment
    • Assumptions
    • Decision Criteria
    • Architecture Tradeoff Matrix
    • Failure Domain Analysis
    • Change Management Considerations
    • Summary and Takeaways
    • Conclusion

    Scenario

    You have Azure IaaS VMs that were built years ago. Some of them were created when unmanaged disks were still common, and the underlying VHDs live in storage accounts as page blobs.

    Everything looks “fine” until it isn’t. You discover this retirement late, you miss the window, and suddenly:

    • critical VMs won’t start
    • disaster recovery rehearsals fail unexpectedly
    • recovery points restore into unusable configurations

    Your goal is simple: identify exposure fast, convert safely, and prevent recurrence.

    What Is Actually Retiring

    Unmanaged disks are VHDs stored as page blobs in storage accounts and attached to VMs.

    What matters operationally:

    • Your VM storage model changes. You stop managing storage accounts for VM disks.
    • Start behavior changes after the deadline. VMs using unmanaged disks become unstartable after end of March 2026.

    Key Challenges

    • Discovery at scale: It’s easy in one subscription, painful across dozens.
    • Availability sets: You can’t mix unmanaged and managed disks in the same availability set. Migration becomes a coordinated batch event.
    • Addressing dependencies: Migration can change VM IPs if you were relying on dynamic allocation.
    • Day-two readiness: Backups, monitoring, and IaC must be updated to reflect managed disks.
    • Operational risk: A “minutes of downtime” change can still trigger extended read-latency effects due to background copy.

    Quick Risk Assessment

    Fastest check in the Azure Portal

    Use this when you need an answer in minutes.

    • Go to Azure Portal → Virtual machines
    • Add the column: Uses managed disks
    • Filter: Uses managed disks = No
    • Export the list and start your backlog

    What you capture in the backlog:

    • subscription, resource group, VM name, region
    • availability set membership (if any)
    • application owner
    • RTO/RPO and business criticality
    • IP dependency notes (static vs dynamic)
    • maintenance window constraints

    Cross-subscription inventory with Azure Resource Graph

    Use this when you need coverage and repeatability.

    Run this query in Resource Graph Explorer:

    Resources
    | where type =~ 'microsoft.compute/virtualmachines'
    | extend osDisk = properties.storageProfile.osDisk
    | extend usesManagedOsDisk = isnotnull(osDisk.managedDisk)
    | where usesManagedOsDisk == false
    | project subscriptionId, resourceGroup, name, location,
              osDiskVhdUri = tostring(osDisk.vhd.uri)
    

    To also flag unmanaged data disks:

    Resources
    | where type =~ 'microsoft.compute/virtualmachines'
    | mv-expand dataDisk = properties.storageProfile.dataDisks
    | extend usesManagedDataDisk = isnotnull(dataDisk.managedDisk)
    | where usesManagedDataDisk == false
    | project subscriptionId, resourceGroup, name, location,
              dataDiskVhdUri = tostring(dataDisk.vhd.uri)
    

    PowerShell spot-check

    Use this when you need a quick operator-friendly script.

    # Lists VMs in the current subscription that use unmanaged OS disks
    Get-AzVM | Where-Object { $_.StorageProfile.OsDisk.ManagedDisk -eq $null } |
      Select-Object ResourceGroupName, Name, Location
    

    Decision Criteria

    Use these to decide whether you convert in place or rebuild.

    Design-time decisions:

    • Do you need to preserve the existing VM identity (NICs, disks, extensions)?
    • Are you dependent on the current private IP or public IP?
    • Is the VM in an availability set, and can you migrate the full set in a window?

    Day-two operations:

    • Can your ops team support a background-copy window where read latency may be elevated?
    • Do you have monitoring that can detect boot or disk anomalies immediately after restart?
    • Do you have rollback options that your change board will accept?

    Architecture Tradeoff Matrix

    Approach When it’s best Downtime profile Blast radius Operational notes
    Convert existing VM disks to managed Most common. Minimal architecture change Short VM downtime for stop/convert/start, plus possible post-cutover read-latency window Per VM or per availability set Must plan for IP behavior and availability set constraints
    Rebuild VM from managed disks (new VM) When you want to modernize NIC/IP, images, or naming Higher because you cut over to a new VM instance App-level Cleaner rollback and modernization, but more moving parts
    Modernize to a higher-level platform When VM is legacy debt and you have time Project-sized App/system-level Not a “six weeks to deadline” move for most orgs

    Failure Domain Analysis

    Where this goes wrong in real life:

    • Availability sets: You discover late that a “single VM change” is really “all VMs in the set change.”
    • Dynamic IP dependencies: Some workloads still hardcode private IPs in config files, firewall rules, or downstream systems.
    • Hidden consumers of the storage account: Diagnostics, scripts, or legacy tooling might assume disks live in a storage account container.

    Change Management Considerations

    • Treat this as a deadline-driven reliability change, not an optimization.
    • Convert in batches:
      • low-risk dev/test first
      • then single-instance production
      • then availability sets
    • Require a pre-flight checklist:
      • backups verified
      • VM extensions healthy
      • static IP set if needed
      • monitoring alert routes validated
    • Document rollback: what “good” looks like, what triggers rollback, and how you recover.

    Summary and Takeaways

    • Your first win is visibility: find unmanaged disks across every subscription.
    • Your second win is scheduling: the conversion is fast, but the coordination is not.
    • Your third win is prevention: once you’re clean, enforce managed disks via policy and CI guardrails.

    Conclusion

    Unmanaged disks are not a theoretical risk. If you still have them, you have a real operational deadline. Inventory now, build a conversion backlog, and execute in controlled waves so you are not negotiating maintenance windows at the last minute.

    Next Post

    Convert Azure VMs from Unmanaged to Managed Disks: A Production-Ready Runbook

    TL;DR Converting a VM to managed disks is usually operationally straightforward: deallocate, convert, start, validate. The real work is coordination: availability set batching maintenance windows IP address behavior validation and…

    Sources

    Migrate your Azure unmanaged disks by March 31, 2026: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-machines/unmanaged-disks-deprecation
    Frequently asked questions about disks: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-machines/faq-for-disks
    Migrate Azure VMs to Managed Disks in Azure: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-machines/windows/migrate-to-managed-disks
    How to identify Azure unmanaged disks and locate the “Migrate to managed disks” option (Q&A): https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/answers/questions/5709098/how-to-identify-azure-unmanaged-disks-and-locate-t

    Like this:

    Like Loading…

    Related posts:

    Combing the Rackspace blogfiles for operational AI pointers

    Unlocking VMware Automation Power: One Python Script to Rule Them All

    Cuba says speedboat attackers from Florida planned to destabilise country | Conflict News

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleTop 5 AI Code Review Tools for Developers
    Next Article Parking-aware navigation system could prevent frustration and emissions | MIT News
    gvfx00@gmail.com
    • Website

    Related Posts

    AI Tools

    Eliminated Morocco turn attention to cohosting 2030 World Cup | World Cup 2026 News

    July 10, 2026
    AI Tools

    How to shrink the token budget without shrinking the team

    July 10, 2026
    AI Tools

    Spain vs Belgium: World Cup quarterfinal – prediction, start time, lineups | World Cup 2026 News

    July 10, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Black Swans in Artificial Intelligence — Dan Rose AI

    October 2, 2025207 Views

    Every Clue That Tony Stark Was Always Doctor Doom

    October 20, 2025131 Views

    We let ChatGPT judge impossible superhero debates — here’s how it ruled

    December 31, 2025100 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from tastytech.

    About Us
    About Us

    TastyTech.in brings you the latest AI, tech news, cybersecurity tips, and gadget insights all in one place. Stay informed, stay secure, and stay ahead with us!

    Most Popular

    Black Swans in Artificial Intelligence — Dan Rose AI

    October 2, 2025207 Views

    Every Clue That Tony Stark Was Always Doctor Doom

    October 20, 2025131 Views

    We let ChatGPT judge impossible superhero debates — here’s how it ruled

    December 31, 2025100 Views

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from tastytech.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Homepage
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    © 2026 TastyTech. Designed by TastyTech.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.