Not sure whether to choose break-fix, managed IT, or in-house IT? Here’s how SMEs should compare cost, risk, speed, and accountability.
Break-Fix vs Managed IT vs In-House IT: Which Support Model Fits a Growing SME?
Most SMEs don’t choose their IT support model in a single decision — they drift into it. You start with “a guy who helps when things break.” Then the business grows, remote work becomes normal, security expectations rise, and suddenly the reactive model feels risky. Or you hire an internal IT person, only to realise one person can’t cover everything: helpdesk, projects, cyber security, Microsoft 365, vendor management, and resilience. That’s when the question becomes real: what support model actually fits the business you are now, not the business you were five years ago?
The right model depends on your risk tolerance, how critical IT is to operations, and how much unpredictability you can accept. Break-fix can feel cheaper—until you factor in downtime, recurring issues, and security gaps. In-house can feel controlled—until you hit holiday cover and specialist depth. Managed IT can feel like “outsourcing”—until you experience what proactive monitoring and consistent standards actually do for stability.
Amazing Support is a multi-award-winning, Microsoft Partner, Cyber Essentials and Cyber Essentials Plus certified provider supporting UK SMEs across London, Greater London and Manchester. We’ve helped many businesses move from reactive support to a model that’s predictable, accountable, and aligned with growth.
The short answer is: break-fix suits low-dependency environments, in-house suits businesses with strong internal ownership, and managed IT suits SMEs that need predictable cost, proactive maintenance, and stronger security—especially as they scale.
How the models compare (in practical terms)
Break-fix (pay when it breaks)
Best when:
- IT is relatively simple
- downtime is tolerable
- you accept variable monthly costs
Risks:
- reactive by design
- issues recur because root causes aren’t prioritised
- security improvements are often delayed
In-house IT (internal ownership)
Best when:
- you want tight alignment with the business
- you have enough scale to justify coverage
- you can support training and specialist needs
Risks:
- single points of failure (holiday/sickness)
- specialist gaps (security, networking, Microsoft 365 depth)
- tooling/monitoring may be limited
Managed IT (proactive, fixed monthly)
Best when:
- you want predictable cost and accountability
- you need proactive monitoring and maintenance
- you want security baselines applied consistently
- you need scalable support as headcount grows
Risks:
- you must choose a provider with clear SLAs, reporting, and ownership
- success depends on onboarding quality and communication
The questions SMEs should ask themselves
- how much does downtime cost us (in real terms)?
- do we have recurring issues that never fully go away?
- do we need stronger cyber security and evidence for clients/insurers?
- do we want predictable monthly spend?
- do we have internal ownership for IT priorities?
FAQ
Is managed IT always more expensive?
Not always. It’s often more predictable, and it can reduce hidden costs like downtime and recurring issues.
Can we combine models?
Yes — co-managed IT can blend internal ownership with MSP depth and tooling.
What’s the biggest sign we’ve outgrown break-fix?
When security and reliability become business-critical and reactive support starts to feel risky.
If you’re weighing up your
IT Support options, we can help you compare models against your actual environment and priorities—so you choose based on risk and outcomes, not just headline cost.