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Crehan: Fibre Channel Sales Rise 6% in 2025 as 64G Adoption Accelerates

Fibre Channel networking sales increased 6% in 2025, extending a multi-year growth cycle driven by enterprise demand for high-performance, mission-critical storage infrastructure, according to Crehan Research. The firm reports that combined growth across 2024 and 2025 exceeded 20%, reflecting sustained investment in storage area networking (SAN) environments.

Both Fibre Channel switches and host bus adapters (HBAs) contributed to the expansion, with enterprises continuing to rely on the technology for secure, deterministic performance in core data center applications. The market momentum aligns with ongoing modernization cycles in enterprise IT, particularly as organizations upgrade infrastructure to support higher data throughput and evolving workload demands.

A key driver of growth is the rapid adoption of 64Gbps Fibre Channel, which now represents approximately half of combined switch and HBA shipments. Many enterprises have already completed switch upgrades to 64Gbps and are preparing for the next transition to 128Gbps platforms, which recently entered the market. In contrast, HBA adoption of 64Gbps remains in earlier stages but is expected to accelerate, reaching roughly 50% of shipments within two years. Crehan Research also points to concurrent upgrade cycles—including quantum-safe storage networking and infrastructure investments tied to enterprise AI—as additional catalysts for continued market expansion.

“We had forecasted a growth year for Fibre Channel networking, and the actual 2025 results exceeded that projection. Looking forward, we anticipate continued sales growth for both Fibre Channel switches and Fibre Channel HBAs, as enterprise customers continue to depend on these products to underpin their most important applications in a secure, reliable and consistent way,” said Seamus Crehan, president of Crehan Research.

🌐 Analysis

Fibre Channel continues to demonstrate resilience in the face of Ethernet-based storage alternatives, particularly in environments requiring predictable latency and high availability, such as financial services, healthcare, and large-scale databases. The transition to 64Gbps and early movement toward 128Gbps mirrors historical upgrade cycles, suggesting a stable, iterative roadmap rather than disruption.

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