An Oracle Java audit does not end when the findings are delivered. It ends when a number is agreed, and the distance between Oracle's opening claim and the figure you finally sign is decided in the negotiation endgame. By this stage the technical work is largely done: the estate is swept, the counted population is challenged, the lookback is bounded by dated records. The endgame is where all of that leverage is converted into a settlement. Played well, it is where a buyer side defense delivers its largest single reduction.
This article is part of the Java Audit Survival Guide, the buyer side pillar on defending an Oracle Java audit. This is the closing phase of everything that came before.
The opening claim is a position, not a price
Oracle's first number is built to anchor high. It typically assumes the broadest counted population, the full three year lookback, and list pricing of 5.25 to 15.00 dollars per employee per month applied generously. None of that is a settlement. It is the start of a negotiation, and treating it as a fixed liability is the most expensive mistake a buyer can make. The endgame begins by refusing the anchor and replacing it with your own evidenced position. How a claim is constructed, and where it overreaches, is set out in how to challenge an inflated Java audit finding.
Leverage is what you built earlier
You cannot create leverage in the endgame. You can only spend what you assembled. The strongest closing positions rest on a few sources of pressure:
- A corrected counted population, with contractors and divested units removed and documented.
- A bounded lookback, with dated removal and migration records limiting the chargeable period.
- A credible alternative, namely the ability to migrate the disputed workloads to a free OpenJDK distribution rather than pay.
- A clear walk away, where the cost of pressing the claim outweighs what Oracle would recover.
The credible alternative matters most. A buyer who can genuinely move off Oracle Java is negotiating from strength, because the subscription becomes a choice rather than an obligation. A buyer with no alternative is negotiating from need.
Timing and framing in the close
The endgame has a rhythm. Oracle's commercial timing, often a quarter or year end, creates pressure to close that a prepared buyer can use rather than fear. Frame the conversation around the verified number, not the opening one, and keep the alternative visible without threatening. Concede slowly and only against reciprocal movement. Above all, do not let an expiring discount substitute for a defensible figure. A discount on an inflated base is still an inflated bill. The settlement structures that hold up are covered in settlement strategy for an Oracle Java audit.
| Endgame factor | Weak position | Strong position |
|---|---|---|
| Counted population | Accepted as Oracle stated it | Corrected and documented |
| Alternative to paying | None; subscription is the only path | Credible OpenJDK migration ready |
| Response to urgency | Signs to capture a discount | Uses Oracle's timing as leverage |
| Basis of the number | Oracle's opening claim, discounted | Your verified figure |
Indicative worked example. A software company entered the endgame facing a large opening claim near a quarter close. With a corrected population, a bounded lookback, and a migration plan ready for the disputed workloads, it declined the discounted version of the opening figure and held to its verified number. The settlement landed at a fraction of the opening claim, with the worst contract traps removed. Figures are indicative.
Close on terms, not just price
The endgame is also the moment to fix the contract, not only the number. A lower figure that still carries a minimum annual floor, an aggressive annual true up, and a steep renewal escalator simply moves the cost into future years. Use the close to strip or soften those traps, so the settlement protects you at the next anniversary as well as today.
The bottom line
The negotiation endgame is where the Java audit number is truly set. Oracle's opening claim is an anchor, not a price, and your leverage is whatever you built in the swept estate, the corrected population, the bounded lookback, and a credible alternative. Refuse the anchor, spend your leverage with discipline, use Oracle's timing rather than fear it, and close on terms as well as price.
Next step. Get a Quote and we will run the endgame with you, from verified number to signed settlement. Submit the form to Get a Quote. We work on a Fixed Fee from $18,000 or a Gainshare share of verified savings or avoided exposure, with zero retainer and no risk to you.