Hi Marco,
I spoke with our QA team regarding your request.
In our tests, we typically run 25–30 Instant Recovery sessions simultaneously on Hyper-V. But that doesn't mean that you cannot run more.
Hardware requirements really depend on your specific environment, so there isn’t a universal answer.
When you initiate an Instant Recovery to Hyper-V, Veeam launches two agent processes: one on the backup repository and one on the target Hyper-V host:
- The repository agent’s memory and CPU needs depend on factors like backup size, chain length, block size, and whether encryption is enabled.
- On the Hyper-V host, the primary factor for RAM usage is the size of the virtual disk (VHD/VHDX) being restored.
Additionally, Veeam Backup & Replication will start a separate manager process on the backup server for each restore session, which also consumes memory and CPU resources.
As a best practice, we recommend not running more Instant Recovery sessions at once than the number of CPU cores on your Hyper-V host. Unfortunately, we currently don’t have formulas for estimating memory usage. Therefore I’d suggest starting with 5–10 IR sessions and monitoring how your hardware handles the load.
Best regards,
Fabian
I spoke with our QA team regarding your request.
In our tests, we typically run 25–30 Instant Recovery sessions simultaneously on Hyper-V. But that doesn't mean that you cannot run more.
Hardware requirements really depend on your specific environment, so there isn’t a universal answer.
When you initiate an Instant Recovery to Hyper-V, Veeam launches two agent processes: one on the backup repository and one on the target Hyper-V host:
- The repository agent’s memory and CPU needs depend on factors like backup size, chain length, block size, and whether encryption is enabled.
- On the Hyper-V host, the primary factor for RAM usage is the size of the virtual disk (VHD/VHDX) being restored.
Additionally, Veeam Backup & Replication will start a separate manager process on the backup server for each restore session, which also consumes memory and CPU resources.
As a best practice, we recommend not running more Instant Recovery sessions at once than the number of CPU cores on your Hyper-V host. Unfortunately, we currently don’t have formulas for estimating memory usage. Therefore I’d suggest starting with 5–10 IR sessions and monitoring how your hardware handles the load.
Best regards,
Fabian
Statistics: Posted by Mildur — Aug 08, 2025 8:26 am









