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Oracle EBS Licensing

Oracle EBS Read-Only User Licence: What It Is and How to Use It to Cut Costs

Oracle E-Business Suite read-only user licences allow organisations to provide view-only access to EBS applications at a fraction of the cost of full-use licences. This independent guide explains how read-only licences work, the difference from full Application User licences, compliance requirements, cost savings potential, audit risks, and best practices for ITAM professionals managing legacy on-premise EBS environments.

๐Ÿ“… Updated February 2026โฑ 18 min readโœ๏ธ Fredrik Filipsson
40โ€“60%
Cost Savings
Read-only vs full Application User licence
Named
User Model
Each read-only user still requires a licence
View Only
Access Scope
Queries, reports, and inquiries โ€” no transactions
On-Prem
Availability
EBS on-premise only โ€” not applicable to SaaS

Table of Contents

  1. What Is Oracle E-Business Suite?
  2. What Is an EBS Read-Only User Licence?
  3. Full-Use vs Read-Only Application User
  4. Who Qualifies for a Read-Only Licence?
  5. Cost Savings and Pricing
  6. Compliance Requirements and Audit Risks
  7. Enforcing Read-Only Access in EBS
  8. Cloud Transition Considerations
  9. Best Practices and Optimisation Strategies
  10. Frequently Asked Questions

1. What Is Oracle E-Business Suite?

Oracle E-Business Suite (EBS) is a comprehensive on-premises enterprise resource planning (ERP) platform covering finance, supply chain, HR, procurement, manufacturing, and more. It remains a legacy Oracle product that many global enterprises still rely on for mission-critical business processes, even as Oracle pushes customers toward its Fusion Cloud applications.

Licensing for Oracle EBS is notoriously complex and costly, utilising a named-user model known as the Application User licence. Every individual who is authorised to access an EBS module needs a licence for that module โ€” even if they only view data occasionally. Oracle's standard policy doesn't differentiate between heavy transactional users and light report-only users when counting licences, which means companies often face over-licensing when they give full licences to users who only run reports.

To address this, Oracle offers a specialised EBS Read-Only User Licence for certain applications โ€” a cost-effective alternative that ITAM professionals can leverage to optimise licensing spend.

For the complete EBS licensing overview, see Oracle E-Business Suite Licensing Guide โ€” 2026 Edition.

2. What Is an EBS Read-Only User Licence?

An Oracle EBS Read-Only User Licence is a licensing option that grants a named user view-only access to specific Oracle E-Business Suite modules. In practical terms, a user with a read-only licence can log in to the EBS application, view data, run inquiries, and generate reports, but cannot create or modify transactions.

This is ideal for roles such as executives reviewing dashboards, auditors checking configurations, finance controllers analysing reports, or analysts who require information from the system but are not responsible for day-to-day data entry.

CharacteristicDetail
Access scopeQueries, reports, inquiries, and lookups only. No inserts, updates, or deletes.
EnforcementContractually defined. System administrators enforce via "inquiry" or reporting responsibilities in EBS.
PricingSignificantly lower than a full-use Application User licence for the same module (typically 40โ€“60% less).
Formal licenceStill a named-user licence. Every read-only user must be licensed โ€” there is no free usage.
AvailabilityOn-premises EBS only. Oracle's SaaS cloud ERP uses a different subscription model.
Minimum usersAt least one full-use Application User licence is required per module before read-only users can be added.
Read-only does not mean "free." Oracle counts any authorised user account toward licensing, regardless of usage frequency. A manager who logs in once a month just to view a dashboard still requires a licence โ€” the difference is that the licence can be a cheaper read-only one if no editing is performed. Failing to licence infrequent users (thinking they "don't count") is one of the most common compliance mistakes in EBS environments.

3. Full-Use vs Read-Only Application User

Understanding the distinction between these two licence types is fundamental to EBS cost optimisation. At least one user must have full rights (and a full licence) for each module in use, while additional users can be assigned read-only licences if their roles permit.

DimensionFull-Use Application UserRead-Only Application User
FunctionalityComplete: create, edit, delete transactions and data within the EBS moduleView only: navigate screens, look up records, run standard/ad hoc reports. No transactions or changes.
Intended rolesOperational staff: AP clerks entering invoices, buyers creating POs, HR managers processing payrollInsight roles: executives, auditors, analysts, finance controllers, compliance officers
CostFull list price per module (most expensive tier)Significantly discounted โ€” typically 40โ€“60% less than full-use
Licence requirementNamed user: one licence per individual per moduleNamed user: one licence per individual per module (same model, lower price)
Minimum requirementAt least one full-use licence required per moduleCan only be added after at least one full-use licence exists for the module
Audit riskLow (if user counts are accurate)Medium-high: Oracle will check that read-only users genuinely perform no transactions
Oracle auditors will verify read-only enforcement. If a user with a read-only licence is found to have performed transactional activities (creating an invoice, approving a PO, modifying a record), Oracle will reclassify that user as requiring a full-use licence โ€” and charge the price difference retroactively, often with back-maintenance fees. The burden of proof falls on you to demonstrate that read-only users genuinely had read-only access.

For a detailed comparison of EBS user types, see Application User Licensing for Oracle EBS.

4. Who Qualifies for a Read-Only Licence?

Not every EBS user can be placed on a read-only licence. The key criterion is that the individual must genuinely only view data โ€” they cannot perform any create, update, or delete operations in the module.

Role ExampleTypical EBS ActivityLicence Type Needed
AP ClerkCreates and processes invoices dailyFull-Use
Procurement BuyerCreates purchase orders, manages suppliersFull-Use
HR AdministratorMaintains employee records, processes payrollFull-Use
Finance ControllerReviews reports, analyses GL balances (no journal entries)Read-Only โœ…
Executive / VPViews dashboards, runs executive summariesRead-Only โœ…
Internal AuditorChecks configurations, reviews transaction logsRead-Only โœ…
Business AnalystRuns ad hoc queries, generates reports for analysisRead-Only โœ…
Manager (approver)Approves invoices or POs within EBSFull-Use (approval = transaction)
Approvers require full-use licences. A common mistake is classifying managers who approve transactions (invoices, purchase orders, expense reports) as read-only users. In Oracle's view, approving a workflow constitutes a transactional activity โ€” the user is changing the state of a record. These users need full-use Application User licences, not read-only.

For the full module-by-module breakdown, see Licensing Oracle EBS Modules & Suites.

Are You Over-Licensing Your EBS Users?

Many enterprises pay full-use licence prices for hundreds of users who only view data. Our independent Oracle advisers can conduct a read-only user assessment, identify optimisation opportunities, and help you reduce EBS licensing costs by 30โ€“50%. Fixed-fee engagements. No ties to Oracle.

5. Cost Savings and Pricing

The read-only user licence is priced significantly lower than a full-use Application User licence for the same module. While exact pricing varies by module, contract terms, and negotiated discounts, the savings are substantial โ€” especially in large environments with many reporting-only users.

ScenarioFull-Use Licence CostRead-Only Licence CostSavings per UserUsers EligibleAnnual Savings
Financials module (GL, AP, AR)$4,350/user$1,740/user$2,61080$208,800
Procurement module$3,000/user$1,200/user$1,80030$54,000
Supply Chain module$4,000/user$1,600/user$2,40025$60,000
Total illustrative savings135$322,800/year

Illustrative figures based on typical Oracle list pricing. Actual costs depend on contract terms, volume discounts, and negotiated rates.

Real-World Optimisation

A mid-sized financial services company had 500 Oracle EBS Financials users, all on full-use Application User licences. An internal review revealed that 180 of those users were finance controllers, regional managers, and analysts who only ran reports and viewed balances โ€” they never created journal entries, invoices, or payments. By reclassifying those 180 users to read-only licences, the company reduced its annual EBS licensing cost by approximately $470,000 while remaining fully compliant. The reclassification was documented and validated before the next Oracle audit cycle.

Additional Pricing Considerations

Minimum quantities: Read-only licences often have low minimums (even 1), so you can purchase exactly what you need. However, the module itself may require a minimum number of total users โ€” any combination of full and read-only can satisfy that threshold.

Support fees: Annual support (typically ~22% of licence cost) applies to read-only licences just as it does to full-use licences. The savings compound because support is calculated on the lower licence price.

Negotiation leverage: List prices are typically negotiable in enterprise agreements. However, Oracle may be less inclined to heavily discount legacy on-premises products while pushing cloud subscriptions. For negotiation strategies, see Oracle Contract Negotiation Service.

6. Compliance Requirements and Audit Risks

Read-only licences introduce specific compliance risks that ITAM professionals must manage carefully. Oracle's audit teams (License Management Services / GLAS) know exactly how to identify read-only licence misuse.

Audit RiskWhat Oracle ChecksConsequence
Transaction activity by read-only usersOracle's LMS scripts can trace which users performed create/update/delete actions in each moduleReclassification to full-use licence + price difference + retroactive support fees
Responsibility misassignmentUsers with read-only licences assigned responsibilities that include transactional formsEven if the user never used the transactional forms, Oracle may argue the access itself requires a full licence
Unlicensed read-only usersUsers with EBS accounts who have no licence at all (neither full nor read-only)Oracle defaults to full-use Professional User pricing for any unlicensed account
Approver misclassificationUsers on read-only licences who approve workflows (invoices, POs, expense reports)Approval = transaction. Full-use licence required.
Custom forms accessing transactional dataCustom screens or reports that inadvertently allow data modificationUsers accessing those custom forms may need full-use licences
Oracle's LMS scripts are read-only โ€” but powerful. When Oracle runs its audit measurement scripts against your EBS database, they can extract detailed user activity logs showing exactly which transactions each user executed. If a "read-only" user created even a single invoice or approved one PO, it will show up. The best defence is to ensure that read-only users technically cannot perform transactions โ€” not just that they haven't done so recently. See Oracle EBS Licence Management and Compliance Best Practices.

For a comprehensive compliance checklist, see Oracle Licensing Guide for CIOs and Procurement Teams.

7. Enforcing Read-Only Access in EBS

The key to successful read-only licensing is technical enforcement โ€” you must configure EBS so that read-only users genuinely cannot perform transactions, regardless of intent.

1

Assign Inquiry-Only Responsibilities

In Oracle EBS, access is controlled through responsibilities. Assign read-only users only "inquiry" or "reporting" responsibilities that restrict them to view-only forms. Never assign a responsibility that includes transactional forms.

2

Audit Responsibility Menus

Review the menu trees attached to each responsibility. Ensure no transactional forms (create, update, approve) are included. Custom responsibilities are especially risky โ€” verify them manually.

3

Lock Down Form Functions

Use Oracle's function security to exclude specific form functions. Even if a menu path exists, function-level exclusions can prevent the user from opening transactional screens.

4

Validate and Document

Run periodic validation queries: check that read-only users have zero insert/update/delete activity in audit tables. Document everything โ€” this is your proof if Oracle audits you.

Need help configuring read-only access for compliance? We can help.

Oracle Licence Management โ†’

8. Cloud Transition Considerations

If your organisation is planning to migrate from Oracle EBS to Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP, the read-only licence model has important implications.

ConsiderationImpact
No licence portabilityEBS read-only licences (and full-use licences) do not transfer to Oracle Fusion Cloud. Cloud uses a separate subscription model. You will need new cloud subscriptions.
Don't over-buy on-premIf a cloud transition is on the horizon, avoid purchasing additional EBS read-only licences that will become obsolete. Consider short-term optimisation instead.
Dual-run licensingDuring migration, you may run both EBS and Cloud simultaneously. Both environments require licensing โ€” read-only users on EBS still need their licences during the overlap period.
Support credit programsOracle's Customer 2 Cloud and similar programs may offer support fee credits when transitioning to cloud. Factor in your read-only licence support fees when calculating potential credits.
EBS 12.2 support through 2030sOracle continues to sell and support EBS licences (including read-only) for on-premises customers. Premier support for EBS 12.2 is committed through at least 2032.

For cloud transition planning, see Oracle EBS to Cloud Transition: Licensing Impact and CIO Playbook: Transition from Oracle On-Premise to Fusion Cloud.

Navigating an Oracle EBS Audit?

If Oracle has initiated an audit โ€” or you suspect one is coming โ€” our independent advisers can validate your read-only licence classifications, challenge incorrect audit findings, and negotiate on your behalf. We work exclusively for customers, never for Oracle.

9. Best Practices and Optimisation Strategies

  1. Conduct a user access review. Pull a complete list of all active EBS users and their assigned responsibilities. Identify every user who only has inquiry/reporting responsibilities โ€” these are your read-only licence candidates. Cross-reference with actual transaction logs to confirm they've performed no transactional activity.
  2. Enforce read-only access technically, not just contractually. Don't rely on users "promising" not to create transactions. Configure EBS responsibilities so read-only users technically cannot access transactional forms. Use function security exclusions as an additional safeguard.
  3. Audit responsibility assignments quarterly. Role changes, new projects, and temporary assignments can cause responsibility creep. A user who was read-only last quarter may have been given a transactional responsibility by a well-meaning admin. Catch it early. See Oracle EBS Licensing Basics.
  4. Document everything. Maintain a register of all read-only users: their names, modules, assigned responsibilities, and the date of last validation. In an Oracle audit, your documentation is your defence. If you can show Oracle a clean, well-maintained register with supporting evidence, you significantly strengthen your position.
  5. Reclassify in both directions. If a read-only user's role changes to include transactions, upgrade their licence to full-use immediately. Conversely, if a full-use user transitions to a reporting-only role, downgrade them to read-only. Both directions save money or prevent compliance exposure.
  6. Factor in module-level licensing. Remember that EBS licensing is per module per user. A single person using three modules in read-only mode needs three read-only licences. Ensure your optimisation covers all modules, not just the most expensive one. See Complete Oracle EBS Application Module List.
  7. Don't forget support cost savings. Annual support (~22% of licence cost) applies to read-only licences at the lower price. When modelling savings, include the compounding support fee reduction โ€” over 3โ€“5 years, this can be as significant as the initial licence savings.
  8. Engage independent expertise for large-scale reclassification. If you have 500+ EBS users to review, an independent Oracle licensing adviser can accelerate the process, validate your classifications, and prepare audit-ready documentation. The advisory fee is typically a fraction of the licence savings achieved.

๐Ÿ’ก The Two-Tier Model: Full-Use + Read-Only

The most cost-effective EBS licensing strategy uses a two-tier approach: full-use Application User licences for operational staff who perform transactions, and read-only licences for everyone else who only needs visibility. This granular matching of licence spend to user needs can generate hundreds of thousands of dollars in annual savings in large environments โ€” without any reduction in functionality or data access for the users who need it.

Frequently Asked Questions

A read-only user can log in to Oracle EBS, navigate module screens, view data, look up records, and run standard or ad hoc reports. They cannot create, edit, or delete any transactions or data. This is enforced through "inquiry" or "reporting" responsibilities that restrict access to view-only forms. See Oracle EBS Licensing FAQ for more details.
Pricing varies by module and contract terms, but read-only licences are typically 40โ€“60% cheaper than full-use Application User licences for the same module. The savings compound through lower annual support fees (calculated at ~22% of the lower licence cost). For a large organisation with 100+ read-only eligible users, this can represent hundreds of thousands of dollars in annual savings.
No. Approving a workflow (invoice approval, PO approval, expense report approval) constitutes a transactional activity in Oracle's view โ€” the user is changing the state of a record from "pending" to "approved." Users who approve transactions in EBS require full-use Application User licences. This is one of the most common misclassification errors in EBS licensing.
Yes. Oracle requires at least one full-use Application User licence for each EBS module in use before read-only users can be added. You cannot have a module licensed entirely with read-only users โ€” at least one person must have full transactional rights.
Oracle will reclassify that user as requiring a full-use licence and charge the price difference. They may also add retroactive support fees for the period the user was under-licensed (typically ~22% per year of the licence difference). If multiple users are affected, the exposure can escalate significantly. The best defence is technical enforcement โ€” configure EBS so read-only users cannot access transactional forms.
Not all EBS modules offer a read-only licence variant. Check Oracle's Applications Licensing Table for the specific modules you use. For modules that don't offer a read-only option, all users require full-use Application User licences regardless of their activity level. See Complete Oracle EBS Application Module List.
Yes, as long as the custom reports and dashboards are truly read-only (no ability to insert or update data). However, be cautious with custom forms that may inadvertently include transactional capabilities โ€” for example, a custom dashboard with an embedded "update" button could jeopardise read-only licence classification. Audit all custom components to ensure they're genuinely read-only.
Yes. Oracle continues to sell and support EBS licences (including read-only user licences) for on-premises customers. EBS 12.2 has premier support committed through at least 2032. However, Oracle's primary sales push is toward Fusion Cloud applications, so pricing and discounts on legacy on-premises products may not be as favourable as cloud deals. See Oracle EBS Licensing Guide for 2025.
This depends on your contract terms and Oracle's policies. In some cases, Oracle may allow a licence downgrade (full-use to read-only) if the user's role has genuinely changed. However, Oracle is not always accommodating on downgrades โ€” they prefer you keep paying for full-use licences. This is often best addressed during contract renewal or a new purchase negotiation, when you have maximum commercial leverage.
Your EBS application licences (both full-use and read-only) are portable across infrastructure under Oracle's "bring your own licence" model. Moving EBS to AWS, Azure, or OCI doesn't change your application user licensing โ€” the same licence counts and types apply. However, be aware of separate considerations for the included restricted-use Oracle Database and WebLogic licences. See Licensing Oracle EBS on AWS.

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FF

Fredrik Filipsson

Co-Founder @ Redress Compliance

20+ years in enterprise software licensing. Former IBM, SAP, and Oracle. 11 years as an independent consultant advising hundreds of Fortune 500 companies on Oracle licensing, audit defence, and contract negotiations.

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