Tax Day is finally here, but for many IT leaders the “filing” season never ends. If your mainframe software renewal is going to land like an unexpected bill from the IRS, you already know the feeling our CEO Luke Tuddenham described in his January article.
What most executives miss, however, are the unseen taxes. These are the hidden financial vacuums, and the heavy human and organizational costs, that compound year after year – the silent drags that don’t show up as line items on your P&L but still hurt your team’s agility, morale, and long-term competitiveness.
After spending more than 30 years auditing and optimizing mainframe environments across 35 countries, we’ve seen the same pattern repeatedly: organizations pay the visible tax (the renewal invoice) while absorbing larger unseen costs. Here’s what those costs look like and why addressing them now is the smartest move you’ll make in 2026.
Most leaders focus on the sticker price: MIPS consumption, software licenses, and maintenance fees. Those are visible. The unseen financial taxes are the downstream effects that multiply the real cost of ownership.
Every dollar tied up in mainframe renewals is a dollar that can’t fund other IT initiatives like AI/ML projects or customer-facing digital experiences. In flat-budget environments, this creates a compounding drag.
Organizations we audit often discover they are spending more on legacy infrastructure than they realize once you factor in projects they had to delay or cancel.
Regulatory bodies in banking, insurance, and government are now treating vendor concentration as a material risk. A single failed audit or forced remediation can cost millions in fines, legal fees, and remediation labor, which are costs that never appear on the vendor invoice.
We’ve helped clients avoid six- and seven-figure exposure simply by producing independent consumption data before the auditor walked in.
When teams can’t get what they need from the mainframe quickly, they often spin up shadow cloud instances or third-party tools. That “invisible” spend adds up fast. One global insurer we worked with was unknowingly running duplicate tooling until an independent review surfaced it.
The Mainframe Tax had quietly created parallel budgets no one was tracking.
While financial taxes are painful, they’re only the tip of the iceberg. The larger, more corrosive taxes are the human and cultural ones.
The most expensive part of the Mainframe Tax isn’t the software – it’s the human toll on the people who keep the lights on.
IBM data says that almost one-quarter of mainframe professionals will retire in the next five years. What the numbers don’t capture is the daily reality for the remaining team:
The result is burnout, quiet quitting, and accelerated attrition. We sometimes hear from clients that their best mainframe talent is actively job-hunting – not because they dislike the platform, but because the environment has become unsustainable. Losing even one senior expert can add weeks or months of risk to every future renewal.
Younger IT professionals want to work on the latest tech. When the majority of their time is spent maintaining decades-old systems, they feel their careers are stalling. This creates a cultural tax: disengagement, low morale, and a widening skills gap.
We’ve sat in rooms with CIOs who admitted their mainframe teams feel “second-class” inside the organization. That perception alone slows digital transformation more than any technical limitation ever could.
Executives aren’t immune. The constant low-level anxiety of “what if the renewal goes sideways?” or “what if we can’t replace that retiring SME in time?” creates decision paralysis. Leaders delay strategic moves because the perceived risk of touching the mainframe feels too high. That hesitation in itself is a tax measured in lost market share, slower time-to-market, and missed opportunities.
Other issues that often arise:
In short, the human Mainframe Tax turns your most experienced people into firefighters instead of strategists. It also turns your IT into a drag on the business rather than a driver of growth.
We recently partnered with a Top 3 Financial Services organization that was trapped in this exact cycle. Their "tax" was buried within a massive, legacy output management system that had become a black box of technical debt.
While the organization saw the high maintenance fees on the surface, our audit revealed the deeper, unseen taxes that were stalling their modernization:
By executing a strategic replacement of their output management system, the company saved millions and reduced their output management footprint. More importantly, they broke the cycle of "Shadow Spend" and reclaimed their team's capacity to focus on high-value transformation.
The Bottom Line: Without intervention, the cycle is relentless: Talent leaves → knowledge gaps widen → teams work harder on legacy fixes → burnout increases → more talent leaves. This "Mainframe Tax" only accelerates until you deliberately choose to stop paying it.
The good news is you don’t have to rip and replace your mainframe to eliminate these taxes. You simply need to restore control and visibility.
CPT Global uses a proven approach that attacks both the financial and human costs:
Clients consistently report not only lower costs but dramatically improved team morale once the unseen taxes are lifted. Their best people stop dreading renewal season and start contributing to innovation again.
Tax season is over, but the Mainframe Tax never sleeps. If your renewal season left you with more questions than answers – or if you simply want an independent second opinion on where the unseen taxes are hiding in your environment – reach out.
We offer a no-obligation audit that maps out both the financial and human exposures. Many leaders tell us it’s the first time they’ve had a complete picture of what their mainframe environment is really costing them.
Drop me a message or reply to this article. Let’s make sure 2026 is the year you finally break the Mainframe Tax, whether it’s visible or invisible, financial, or human.