When disaster strikes—whether due to ransomware, hardware failure, or human error—how quickly and completely you recover can determine the survival of your business.
In 2025, organisations have more options than ever, but the question remains: Do you choose Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) or stick with traditional in-house DR infrastructure?
Let’s break down the differences, pros, cons, and how to choose the right fit for your business.
What Is DRaaS?
Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) is a cloud-based solution that replicates and hosts your systems and data in a secure remote environment. In the event of a disaster, DRaaS enables fast failover to the cloud, allowing your business to continue operating with minimal disruption.
At Ron Klink, DRaaS is a core service we offer to clients who need fast, tested, and scalable recovery—without the cost and complexity of building their own DR infrastructure.
What Is Traditional Disaster Recovery?
Traditional DR involves managing your own infrastructure (secondary data centres, tapes, or remote sites) and using manual processes to recover data and services. It typically requires:
- Dedicated hardware
- On-site or colocation storage
- Staff to manage replication, testing, and recovery
While it provides full control, it also comes with higher costs and more maintenance.
Feature | DRaaS | Traditional DR |
Infrastructure | Cloud-based | On-premises or colocation |
Cost | Subscription-based, scalable | High upfront CapEx + maintenance |
Failover Time | Fast (minutes to hours) | Slow (hours to days) |
Scalability | Highly scalable | Limited by physical resources |
Management | Managed by provider (e.g. Ron Klink) | Managed by internal IT |
Testing | Automated & remote | Manual & time-intensive |
Security | Cloud security + encryption | Depends on internal controls |
When to Choose DRaaS
You should consider DRaaS if:
- You lack the in-house resources to manage full DR infrastructure
- You need a quick RTO/RPO for mission-critical services
- You operate in multiple locations or hybrid environments
- You want automated DR testing, failover, and real-time replication
- You’re under compliance pressure and need audit-ready documentation
Explore how DRaaS supports compliance on our cloud DR insights page.
When Traditional DR Might Still Work
Traditional DR could be appropriate if:
- You have existing investments in redundant infrastructure
- You require physical control over all systems (e.g. for sensitive data)
- Your recovery tolerance is flexible (e.g. for archive systems)
- You’re in an industry with stringent regulatory needs that require on-prem isolation
That said, most modern businesses are shifting to hybrid models—combining on-prem backup with cloud-based failover.
Hybrid Approach: The Best of Both Worlds
A growing number of organisations are using:
- Immutable, on-prem backups for immediate access
- DRaaS for high-availability services and geographic resilience
- Air-gapped storage to prevent ransomware access
- Automated DR testing to ensure recovery works
This blended strategy helps businesses meet cost, control, and compliance goals simultaneously.
Not sure which approach is right for you?
Let our disaster recovery experts help you evaluate your infrastructure and create a tailored business continuity strategy.