"cobol Supports Close to 90% of Fortune 500 Business Systems Today."
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CobolMainframe ComputingLegacy Systems
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Cobol
Mainframe Computing
Legacy Systems
A post claiming COBOL's widespread use in Fortune 500 business systems sparks debate about its prevalence and the challenges of maintaining legacy systems.
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Oct 20, 2025 at 10:20 AM EDT
2 months ago
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That... just doesn't feel plausible to me. I might believe the second half of that sentence, but I don't think I believe the first.
>We offer experienced COBOL (and other software) consultants
Hmmm
"Hey X, can you check with the IT guys how much COBOL we are using and how that number can be increased? Thx"
Replacing just any failed hardware component does require downtime, that is critical for any financial business.
So he number does not surprise me.
Many companies tried to move off mainframes, but they realized the costs and risks are to great to bet their business in order to be "cool".
Things that are largely or entirely done on mainframes today:
- Airlines: ticket reservations, crew management, route planning, critical flight operations, some parts of traffic control
- Banking: money movement, loan origination (though some of this has moved off over the years), account management (most of the slick frontends you use on the daily are just wrappers around mainframe programs)
- Government: So much state government stuff (licenses/registrations, tax systems)
I haven't personally done a lot of work on the mainframe, but as I understand it, they are still unbelievably robust machines that are extremely redundant and reliable and still have unmatched uptime guarantees.
> Various recently published COBOL articles state the following…
For all we know those articles could be LLM written blogpost spam that just happens to support what the authors of a COBOL consulting firm want us to believe
Regardless of what we think of it, we must appreciate its longevity and reliability. Sure, it is hard to change and all that but can we really imagine today's modern tooling surviving 50 years and counting ? I don't know.
I've also now been trying to chase down sources for these numbers - one archived page [0] from 2013 might have been the origin for this, but it itself sources unlinked reports such as "Aberdeen Group; Giga Information Group; Database & Network Journal; The COBOL Report; SearchEngineWatch.com; Tactical Strategy Group; The Future of COBOL Report"
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I can ... "half" believe it's not that 90% of Fortune 500s own/run/manage their own custom COBOL code, but rather that many of them rely on a few HR systems, or payment systems, that are written in COBOL. That's one theory.
Again, sorry if this seems a bit outlandish and/or maybe an exaggerated claim - but I do appreciate everyone's input here. I feel like it would be great to fully debunk this, or actually to collectively learn something ha. Cheers
[0] https://web.archive.org/web/20180707025312/https://www.micro...