We talk to Perth business owners every week who are still running on the break/fix model. They call someone when the internet drops, when email stops working, or when a computer gives up. They pay an hourly rate, get the problem fixed, and do not hear from their IT person again until the next crisis.
It works — until it does not. And in 2026, the gap between break/fix and managed IT has become so wide that the two models are barely comparable.
Break/fix is reactive IT support. Something breaks. You call someone. They fix it. You get a bill.
There is no monitoring. No one is watching your systems for warning signs. No one is patching your servers. No one is checking whether your backups ran last night. You find out there is a problem when your staff cannot work.
The pricing looks attractive on the surface — you only pay when you need help. But the hidden costs are significant. Downtime while you wait for someone to become available. Lost productivity while the problem is diagnosed. No preventive maintenance, which means problems compound over time. And absolutely no strategic advice about where your IT should be heading.
For a business with two or three people and minimal IT complexity, break/fix can make sense. For anyone beyond that, the maths stops working.
Managed IT is the opposite model. You pay a fixed monthly fee and your provider takes responsibility for keeping everything running, secure, and up to date.
That includes 24/7 monitoring of your network, servers, and endpoints. Proactive patching and updates. Backup monitoring and testing. Help desk support for your staff. Security management including endpoint detection, MFA enforcement, and threat monitoring. And strategic advice through regular service reviews and technology roadmaps.
The fee is predictable. You know what IT costs you every month, which makes budgeting straightforward. And because your provider is invested in preventing problems rather than billing for fixing them, the incentives are aligned — fewer issues means less work for both of you.
Perth business owners often compare the monthly managed IT fee to what they spent on break/fix last year and conclude that managed is more expensive. This misses three things.
First, break/fix does not include the cost of downtime. When your server goes down and you are waiting four hours for someone to arrive, what is that costing your business? For a 20-person office, even a few hours of downtime per quarter adds up to tens of thousands in lost productivity.
Second, break/fix does not include cyber security. In 2026, with mandatory ransomware reporting, rising insurance requirements, and government clients demanding Essential Eight compliance, security is not optional. Adding security tools, monitoring, and incident response to a break/fix arrangement is either prohibitively expensive on an ad-hoc basis or simply not happening — which is the more common scenario.
Third, break/fix does not include strategic technology guidance. A managed services relationship includes someone thinking about your technology roadmap, the AI capabilities that should be deployed in your business, the compliance requirements you need to meet, and the technology debt you are accumulating. That layer is invisible on the invoice but compounds over time.
Three things have changed since 2023 that have widened the gap between the two models:
Cyber compliance got teeth. Mandatory ransomware reporting is now in force in Australia. The Privacy Act 2026 is starting enforcement. Cyber insurance underwriters demand evidence of mature posture before issuing policies. Break/fix providers cannot deliver this. Managed providers can.
AI capability became a real differentiator. The MSPs that have built operational AI inside their service delivery can do more per dollar of client fee than they could two years ago. We covered the operational changes in our AI in IT service delivery piece. Break/fix has not absorbed this shift. The cost-per-incident on a break/fix engagement is higher in 2026 than it was in 2023.
Technology stacks shifted significantly. EDR/XDR/MDR evolved. Cloud-first deployment became the default. Microsoft retired Gold Partner status and introduced the Solutions Partner framework. The right tooling answer changed across multiple categories. Businesses on break/fix arrangements are typically still running 2022 or 2023 stack decisions because there is no one thinking strategically about the upgrade path.
We are not going to pretend break/fix has zero use case. For a two-or-three-person business with minimal IT complexity and no compliance requirements, paying $1500 a couple of times a year for ad-hoc help is cheaper than $400 a month for managed services.
The break-even point is typically around five to seven staff. Above that, the maths is in favour of managed services. Below that, break/fix often still wins — though the line moves every year as cyber and compliance pressure increases.
The term “managed services” covers a wide range of offerings. At the floor, it means monitoring, patching, and help desk. At the ceiling, it means a full vCIO relationship including strategic technology roadmap, security operations, compliance reporting, and AI deployment.
What you want depends on your business size, sector, and complexity. For most Perth businesses in the 10 to 50 staff range, a mid-tier managed services arrangement covering proactive monitoring, modern security stack, M365 management, and quarterly strategic reviews is the right answer. For 50 to 200 staff, the same scope plus stronger vCIO involvement and AI capability deployment.
Our MSP buyer’s guide covers the structural questions to ask when evaluating providers across the four kinds of MSP in the Australian market.
We can put together a side-by-side cost comparison of your current break/fix spend versus a managed services proposal, including the hidden costs that usually do not show on the break/fix invoice. No obligation.