Cisco UCS E-Series Servers provide robust hardware reconditioning and single-pane management. They enhance IT infrastructure through integration with Cisco routers, offering superior stability, scalability, and efficiency, with a notable impact on cost savings and operational efficiency.

| Product | Mindshare (%) |
|---|---|
| Cisco UCS E-Series Servers | 3.6% |
| HPE Synergy | 9.2% |
| Dell PowerEdge MX- Series | 9.1% |
| Other | 78.1% |
| Type | Title | Date | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Category | Blade Servers | Jun 23, 2026 | Download |
| Product | Reviews, tips, and advice from real users | Jun 23, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | Cisco UCS E-Series Servers vs Dell PowerEdge MX- Series | Jun 23, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | Cisco UCS E-Series Servers vs Dell PowerEdge R-Series | Jun 23, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | Cisco UCS E-Series Servers vs HPE BladeSystem | Jun 23, 2026 | Download |
| Title | Rating | Mindshare | Recommending | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dell PowerEdge R-Series | 4.5 | 5.1% | 99% | 307 interviewsAdd to research |
| HPE Synergy | 4.2 | 9.2% | 91% | 91 interviewsAdd to research |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 3 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 5 |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 15 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 14 |
| Large Enterprise | 21 |
Cisco UCS E-Series Servers are known for exceptional hardware reconditioning and management through UCS Fabric Interconnects. They offer superior visibility, disaster recovery compatibility, and excellent performance with scalability. Reliability and minimal downtime are key advantages, along with a low form factor and straightforward GUI interfaces that aid in setup and maintenance. While they significantly impact cost savings, high pricing in Asian markets, lack of cloud readiness, and challenging firmware upgrades are areas needing improvement.
What are the valuable features of Cisco UCS E-Series Servers?Government and enterprises utilize Cisco UCS E-Series Servers for managing data centers and developing datasets. They are employed in hosting enterprise systems, supporting AI projects, enhancing network performance, and processing payments for small-scale agricultural entities, showcasing their versatility across industries.
Cisco UCS E-Series Servers was previously known as UCS E-Series Servers.
Navaho, MiroNet AG, Columbia Sportswear
| Author info | Rating | Review Summary |
|---|---|---|
| Solution Architect at COPYCAT LIMITED | 4.5 | I use Cisco UCS E-Series Servers for managing IT infrastructure, benefiting from its seamless integration with Cisco routers and excellent server management features. Improvements are needed in VMware and NVIDIA integration, but I've seen ROI within three years. |
| Group General Manager-ICT at SkyLink | 4.0 | We utilize Cisco UCS E-Series Servers for enterprise systems because of their stability, speed, and scalability. However, the pricing needs improvement, and additional collaborative tools would be beneficial. Previously, we faced support issues with IBM after their Lenovo partnership. |
| IT infrastructure at Halcon | 4.0 | I use Cisco UCS E-Series Servers for mission-critical applications due to their network provisioning via a single interface. However, the product requires built-in monitoring tools and a more affordable licensing model, especially compared to alternatives like VxRail. |
| Assistant Director IT (Data Center operations) at Freelancer | 4.0 | I found the Cisco Blade chassis highly stable, scalable, and easy to configure, with superior hardware quality. Its high cost, particularly in Asia, is a drawback, but it offers strong ROI for customers prioritizing quality over budget. |
| Group General Manager-ICT at a consumer goods company with 501-1,000 employees | 4.5 | I find Cisco UCS servers highly stable, efficient, and easy to set up, significantly improving processing time for my organization. While performance is great, I wish the pricing was more competitive, especially for SAP Hana in-memory processing. |
| Chief Information Security Officer at KNS | 3.5 | I find Cisco UCS E-Series Servers valuable for their visibility and manageability, especially in disaster recovery scenarios. They excel in compatibility and low form factor but need improvement in multi-vendor ecosystem compatibility. They are ideal for non-intensive processes. |
| Sales Consultant at Esconet Technologies Pvt. Ltd. | 4.5 | Cisco UCS E-Series Servers have an advantage due to the existing setup, helping them compete effectively. However, they need to be cloud-ready with a dedicated cloud version to enhance their competitiveness and appeal in modern deployments. |
| Network Administrator at a educational organization with 501-1,000 employees | 3.5 | I've found Cisco UCS E-Series Servers reliable and easy to maintain, with good support. My main frustration is the firmware upgrade documentation, which is extremely confusing. This complexity means I'm considering moving to other vendors in the future. |
Positive

We use Cisco UCS E-Series Servers to host enterprise systems.
The product's most valuable features are stability, speed, and scalability. We rarely encounter downtime issues, and it has an expandable memory storage. Additionally, it blends well with Cisco's security tools.
The platform's pricing needs improvement. There could be more collaborative tools included.
We have been using Cisco UCS E-Series Servers since 2015. At present, we use the latest version.
I rate the product's stability a ten out of ten.
We have more than 300 product users in our organization. I rate its scalability a nine out of ten.
We used IBM before. After IBM's partnership with Lenovo, we faced issues related to support services. We received a different quality support than we used to get from IBM directly.
The initial setup was easy. We connected with a Cisco engineer to deploy the product. It took us three days to complete the installation due to the large data migration. We have a team of 15 engineers involved in the deployment process.
Cisco's engineer assisted us in installing the product. We outsourced the maintenance process to a Cisco-certified company.
The product is expensive. I rate its pricing a five out of ten.
I recommend Cisco UCS E-Series Servers and rate it an eight out of ten.
My company uses Cisco UCS E-Series Servers in its IT infrastructure and for mission-critical applications.
The solution's most valuable feature stems from the fact that you can upgrade and do all the network provisioning from Cisco UCS Fabric Interconnects, so you just go to one single pane of glass, allowing you to manage the complete solution that comes to the networking, especially Cisco UCS B-Series.
The most important part of the product is that they need to engineer the product in such a way that it has built-in monitoring tools, like VxRail or some other solution.
The product should also be available in a standard edition or a standard license since currently there is a need to pay for an extra license, which is very expensive, especially when considering the budgeting part of our company.
The most important parts that need improvement in the solution are its integration and monitoring capabilities.
Stability-wise, it is a good product that remains stable.
It is a scalable solution.
Around three customers of my company work with Cisco UCS E-Series Servers.
The initial setup of Cisco UCS E-Series Servers is straightforward.
The solution can be deployed in a maximum of two days, considering the network is available during the deployment phase.
The solution is deployed on an on-premises model.
The deployment process for Cisco UCS E-Series Servers consists of an approach in which you just provision the servers and upgrade Cisco UCS Fabric Interconnects. Whatever the hypervisor will be, you can take the product to the next level when starting with the product.
Only two or three people are required for the deployment and maintenance phase of the solution.
There is a need to pay towards the licensing costs of the solution. The most expensive server from Cisco is Cisco UCS B-Series. There is a need to pay towards the additional costs apart from the standard licensing costs for the solution.
I recommend the solution to those who plan to use it.
I rate the overall product an eight out of ten.
It was a government organization and we only developed a data set. We have data centers. So where I designed cell phones for the customer, I used two Blade chassis 5108 for a primary data center and one Dell Chassis. I used two Blade chassis with two fabric interconnects that were F5-6-2-4-4-8 series and was able to interconnect A and able to interconnect B. So I was able to figure it out. First of all, I am mega cabling metrics for both the chassis and I used two IOM for each chassis. Then I connected it to an IBM storage with their servers. I also added EMC storage and HP 3PAR storage as well with this Dell chassis.
If you provide the high-end skill and high-end bandwidth for this single port it will be more beneficial for that customer. The high-end traffic is going to be more beneficial for customers and provide high bandwidth traffic between servers or between chassis.
In terms of the features that I have found most valuable, I would say the hardware recondition in this chassis is pretty good, and that is not found with other vendors like HP or Dell servers. I like the hardware recondition of this chassis because you have just a single cable for the server cords and then you can easily use virtual HPS and the perfect server providing for this Blade chassis. I like the hardware of this setting.
One thing that could be improved is the cost -it is very high for this Blade chassis as compared to other vendors. Especially in Asia. Asian customers mostly prefer a cost effective, cheaper solution. The Blade chassis is perfect quality compared to the Dell chassis and I personally like it, but the customers want cost a effective solution for this server.
I first began deploying the Cisco Blade chassis in 2014. In 2016 we deployed it for our customer China Airlines. Then I deployed multiple C-Series rack servers in seven sites for the State. In that case I actually deployed C-Series rack servers. So I have a lot of experience with Cisco C-Series rack servers and I have three to four Blade chassis for multiple customers. About three to four months ago I deployed a Cisco UCS C-Series rack server, I believe C240, and four rack servers. Plus I have trained the customer, as well, about how to use the Cisco rack server.
I would rate the stability as 98/99 out of a hundred.
The scalability of this solution is pretty good. You can easily scale the Blade servers to interconnect. You can add multiple Blade servers because you have a single chassis. So we can add four servers in the chassis and eight servers of hardware in a single chassis. And if you want to add more servers, you can add them into the chassis in the same fabric interconnect and you won't need to purchase other fabric servers or to add another server.
Sometime I use Cisco technical support.
On a scale of one to 10, I would evaluate their support as a nine.
I like the hardware of the Cisco chassis. In HP products, for example, there are a lot of updates and a lot patches from their side. With Cisco, the quality is already at a high level and there is no need to upgrade or to have patches as frequently as HP or HSE. Cisco's UI is much more stable compared to HP. Overall, the Cisco chassis is pretty good, pretty stable and easier to configure as compared to HP and others.
The setup process of this chassis is really easy. And it is easy to use. Anybody who has CCNA training, who has the knowledge of basic routing, basic servers, and storage can perform the configuration of the chassis and servers. It is very easy. I learned this by working with this chassis and server and by reading blogs and watching YouTube. It's not complex and there is no need for much expertise. If you have the basic knowledge you can easily configure its chassis.
I read a blog, watched YouTube, learned here and there and it took me four days to configure the chassis. After that, for the the second chassis, I just needed four hours to configure. It is easy to configure. If I have a chassis, I can configure it in two or three hours maximum.
In terms of an implementation strategy, it depends on the client. It first depends on the design.
Customers have seen a return on their investment. Especially those who can not compromise on quality, they can definitely use this product and get a high ROI. But for smaller-medium customers that purchase this chassis or servers it might be a high cost. That's why those customers prefer other vendors because they can get a lower cost chassis or server. So mostly they prefer a local server.
The Cisco chassis is very easy to configure and any network engineer or expert can configure the solution and easily integrate it with the chassis. If you have another chassis, like HP, and you configure storage with HP media or FC carrier, you will need to have additional costs for switches. But Cisco chassis products are good. You can easily just add storage with an upgrade and there is no need to purchase any switches. You can get it.
On a scale of one to ten, I would rate Cisco UCS E-Series Servers a 10 out of 10.
There is one thing more I can add. The traffic flows of the Cisco chassis switches are very easy and very straight forward. There is no error in the traffic. You can easily work on it. Now, having three or four years working on this chassis, I feel it is much easier to use this chassis compared with the other ones.
The UCS Servers are our primary servers processing payment for our 600,000 plus small scale growers on a monthly basis. They Host our SAP ERP system and all other on premise systems across the different factories in the country.
The support from CISCO for all their products that we are using is great. The servers are stable. We once had a major power surge that went through our UPSs as a result of fault in the power distribution channel. The only equipment that was not affected were the CISCO Servers.
We have also brought down the processing time from 6 hours to 1 hour.
The most valuable features are that they are efficient and easy to setup.
When comparing to other solutions the performance is good and in terms of stability, there is no comparison.
For the SAP Hana in-memory processing takes a lot of resources and we are forced to delete some logs to improve on speed especially during peak hours (i.e. when almost every one is using system)
I would like to see better pricing available. They can try to compare with their counterparts on the same level with the same specifications, the same processing capacity, and try to match their price.
I am always asked to justify why we should purchase such expensive hardware when there are other brand names available with same capacity for a lesser price.
I have been using this solution for five years.
We are using both UCS M4 220s , M5 220s and the UCS 240 M4, C460 M4.
This solution is stable. No other solutions compare.
This is a scalable product and we upgrade on demand.
We have approximately 200 users in our main office, but we have 69 factories and each of those factories has at least one of the UCS servers.
We plan to increase our usage in the future, as any new factory will require a new server and we plan to use Cisco.
We have not contacted technical support. We use the Cisco partners Next Technologies and they help us sort everything out, not only with the UCS Servers but also with our networking.
Previously, we were using IBM. IBM sold its intel-line service to Lenovo. We tried using Lenovo, but in terms of performance, there was a degraded performance.
I had gone to San Jose for some training when I saw the UCS Servers. We decided to try them out and have not yet been disappointed. The UCS Servers are more stable.
I did not have an issue with the IBM servers that we were using, but we could not continue because the Power servers were quite expensive.
The initial setup was straightforward.
We were connected to a CISCO engineer in Dubai, and another from San Jose, I opened a port for them and they were able to set up from where they were.
Some of the best startups that I have had are when the engineer doesn't have to come on-site. They set everything up remotely and I never have any issues.
The setting up of the hardware for implementation of the SAP ERP was done by the Cisco team through a partner and took a very short time. It was done within a week. We used a Cisco partner called Next Technologies.
My project took some time due to a lack of knowledge transfer, and some training. It was a new ERP that we were setting up. The delay had nothing to do with the setup of the cisco servers.
ROI - 3 years. We use to spend a lot on maintenance for server for the other brands -- especially on spare parts. Rarely do the Cisco servers break down.
It's expensive, they are quite pricey. For the to penetrate the African market, price require a review.
We evaluated HP & Dell . the experience we had before made them not an option with our users.
Our company is unique. We train our people so that we have the technical capability within the organization. We are managing agents for the 69 factories, which is why it is very important to have internal support capacity. I am more of a customer but I can handle most of the support issues internally. Anything beyond me goes to the partner.
All of our networking products from routers to servers are from Cisco. We use the Cisco server product but for storage, we have NetApp and just ordered HP, but, it has not arrived yet.
Apart from PCs and notebooks, this is the first time that we are trying HP.
The Cisco service line entered this market much later than the other companies, such as HP and Dell. They have been in the region for as long as I can remember. When I left college, we had knowledge of Cisco because of the networking components and security.
What I can advise other prospective customers is that they should not worry about Cisco's support, stability, and performance. They are quite stable and you will never spend a sleepless night because of the Cisco service product.
The capacity is adequate for the moment.
I would rate this solution a nine out of ten.
Cisco has better visibility and manageability for disaster recovery. It is the best thing about it. It is compatible and has a low form factor. It is good for minimum-requirement deployments and processes that are not highly intensive.
The fabric controller and fabric access we use must be from Cisco. The tool must be made compatible with multi-vendor ecosystems.
I have been using the solution for four years.
I rate the tool’s stability a ten out of ten. There is no issue with the hardware and the firmware.
The solution is scalable. We have around 60 customers. We have seven people in Cisco’s deployment team, including two engineers and five administrators.
The initial setup was straightforward. The deployment doesn’t take long. The person deploying the product must know Cisco’s ecosystem and the administration portal. We follow the standard deployment process provided by Cisco.
We pay an annual subscription fee for the product. The solution is expensive. Cisco has increased the price of all its products by 40%
I provide training for the solution. I rate the product a ten out of ten for functionality, stability, and hardware performance. However, it has some issues. I would not recommend the product to others. Overall, I rate the tool a seven out of ten.

It is not a solution that is cloud ready. So, it should be made cloud ready.
The solution should have a cloud version.
I have been using Cisco UCS E-Series Servers for ten years. My company has a partnership with Cisco.
The product is overall stable.
The product is scalable. I recommend the solution for mid-sized businesses because of various aspects, including its pricing and the existing setup of the customer.
I am satisfied with Cisco's technical support.
Considering the competitors of Cisco I have worked with, the solution has some advantages because of the existing setup, which the customer already has, and so that is what helps it build up an advantage over its competitor.
The solution is easy to deploy.
My company helps to implement the solution for our customers.
The pricing of the solution is reasonable. From a commercial point of view, the prices are okay.
I recommend the solution to those who want to use Cisco UCS E-Series Servers.
The product is easy to integrate with an infrastructure that is not from Cisco.
I rate the overall product a nine out of ten.
Cisco UCS E-Series Servers have been reliable. I think that's one of the big things. Their hardware has been pretty, pretty reliable. I have noticed some issues with their controllers failing due to the thermal paste drying up and the heat sinks falling off causes them to fail. But that was something we experienced last year. It took almost five years for any hardware failure. And even that was like a $100 repair. So nothing too major.
Additionally, the UCS GUI is pretty straightforward. The server itself is a lot easier to maintain than some of the other Cisco equipment, like the routers and switches.
They are really easy to maintain. I've added RAM to them. I've done a lot of other things with the virtualization.
In terms of what needs improvement, I would say the biggest pain point for us is the matrix for the firmware upgrades. It is a pain. You look at that thing, you might as well be reading Greek. You just look at it and you're like, well, is it this with this one? Or this with this one? My model matches this, but my CPU is running this. It's just a nightmare. It would be a whole lot better if they could clean up their documentation on it.
It would be good if they organized that more making it a little bit easier for people who don't understand the language as much. I think that's kind of what Cisco in general is, if you're not a CCNA or something like that you're going to have a lot of trouble managing and maintaining it. I think that's probably one of the biggest failure points with Cisco, from their documentation all the way to their products. I mean it's a solid product for sure. And they have some of the best experts working for them. But for small house users and schools, it's not really feasible.
We have been using Cisco UCS E-Series Servers for three to five years. We bought all the Cisco equipment at the same time. It was before I actually joined the company, but they were pretty much all bought within a year or two of each other. So somewhere in that three to five range.
I took it over the maintenance two years ago. I've also worked with vendors to initially get that started because I didn't know at the beginning how to do that.
We don't have a choice where I work. I have to handle everything on the racks. So servers, everything that's contained in the servers, all the switches, all the infrastructure. I deal with it by myself. And we have 10 sites with the same infrastructure at all sites, I maintain all those.
The tech support is really good. I don't go through them, though. We have a reseller that we go through. They've basically got the TAC licenses. We work with an organization called OneNeck. And they do the majority of our tier one support. Then, if they can't get it figured out, they call TAC. And I've dealt with TAC just one or two times because I took over on the troubleshooting. But I would say that they know their stuff. I give them the logs and they can knock it out pretty quickly.
In terms of the initial setup, I didn't do the install. I've done installs of their Cisco switches and things like that, and those are pretty straightforward and simple. I didn't actually do the UCS servers, so I'm not sure. We had one fail and we used an old one and spun that up, and that was relatively easy to reconfigure, I should say. So just reassigning IPs and folks' names and all that. That was simple.
The hardware was pretty simple to maintain.
Our next move will be going away from them. We're probably going to move to a PowerEdge Dell or HP solution. We've already looked into that a little bit. So I don't have a lot of great things to say necessarily. With the blade servers, as long as they run, I think that's the most important thing. And software and everything seems to be pretty stable with those. They're pretty hands-off. It's just a little more complex when you have to upgrade the firmware.
On a scale of one to ten, I would give Cisco UCS E-Series Servers a seven. I think the biggest thing is they have good longevity.