Updated: July 10, 2020 (October 25, 2010)
Charts & IllustrationsChanges to SQL Server Standard and Enterprise Editions
Packaging, pricing, and licensing rules changed between Standard and Enterprise editions of SQL Server 2008 R2 and their SQL Server 2008 predecessors.
Prices quoted in the chart reflect the highest a customer in the United States would pay through the Open volume licensing program.
| Standard | Enterprise | |
| Position in product lineup | Unchanged. Mid-tier offering for midsize businesses and departmental usage | Changed. New Datacenter edition displaces Enterprise as top-of-the-line offering |
| Maximum accessible memory | Reduced to 64GB; SQL Server Standard 2008 supported OS maximum of 2TB | Unchanged. 2TB |
| Maximum number of processors | Unchanged at four processors | Reduced to eight processors; previous version supports OS maximum of 64 |
| Server-CAL pricing | Unchanged. US$898 for server license, US$164 for SQL Server 2008 R2 CAL | Unchanged. US$8,592 for server license, US$164 for SQL Server 2008 R2 CAL |
| Per-processor pricing |
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