How CISOs Should Plan Security Budgets for 2026

Build a defensible 2026 security budget with data, not guesswork. We share practical tips, ROI levers, and fresh insights from our survey of 300+ CISOs and security leaders.

Budgets are up. Eighty-five percent of organizations increased cybersecurity spending this year, and nearly nine in ten expect to increase it again in 2026. Yet more money hasn’t delivered more confidence. More than half of security leaders say their organizations still aren’t investing enough to counter the risks they face.

As budget season approaches, CISOs are under pressure to prove that spending growth translates into real impact. The 2026 CISO Budget Benchmark Report from Wiz, based on insights from more than 300 security leaders, offers a look at how peers are approaching that challenge.

In this post, we’ve distilled the data into practical lessons to help you refine your 2026 budget strategy, balance competing priorities, and demonstrate measurable ROI to your board.

1. Reframe ROI Around Security Yield

Budgets have grown into the millions, yet even high-spending enterprises often feel under-secured. The issue isn’t always the amount of funding but the lack of a clear story about what that money achieves.

Leading CISOs are redefining ROI in terms of security yield: how much risk reduction is achieved per incremental dollar. That shift moves budget discussions from activity to impact.

When presenting to the board, quantify the risk delta tied to each investment. For example, link a cloud visibility project to a measurable drop in exposed assets or over-permissioned accounts. Boards respond to clarity and causality, not technical depth. A precise yield narrative earns both trust and future funding.

Present your cloud security strategy like a business leader with this editable CISO board report template that helps you explain risk and priorities in board-friendly terms.

2. Balance the People Equation

People remain the largest line item, averaging roughly a quarter of total security spend. But adding headcount doesn’t always equate to added capability.

Many CISOs are evolving their workforce models to stretch the value of every analyst. Managed or co-managed SOCs can extend coverage while preserving institutional knowledge. Automation supports analysts by eliminating repetitive triage, not replacing expertise.

Some leaders are also reallocating part of their personnel budget toward reskilling programs that move existing staff into cloud and AI security domains. It’s a pragmatic way to grow capability without inflating payroll.

3. Control Cloud Complexity Before It Controls You

Cloud security dominates the modern security agenda. Nearly nine in ten organizations plan to increase their team’s focus on the cloud over the next two years, yet 49% cite cloud complexity as the top barrier to effectiveness.

The goal isn’t to spend more on the cloud but to invest smarter within it. CISOs gaining the most traction are channeling spend toward contextual visibility that links identities, workloads, and data exposure into one risk picture. They are also phasing out redundant point tools in favor of unified platforms that can scale across environments.

Every dollar spent simplifying the cloud estate pays dividends in efficiency, response speed, and board-level clarity.

4. Rationalize Tools to Reclaim Control

Tool sprawl has quietly become a cost center. Over half of organizations now run 25 or more security tools, and high-spending enterprises report the lowest satisfaction. Each tool adds integration overhead, alert noise, and management burden that dilute ROI.

Forward-thinking CISOs are adding decommissioning as a formal budget line. Retiring or consolidating low-value tools frees funds for higher-yield initiatives like automation, analytics, and staff development.

Simplification signals control. A leaner, better-integrated stack makes it easier to prove which investments improve security outcomes and which simply maintain complexity. Use our CISO security tool evaluation framework + template to evaluate, justify, and streamline your tool portfolio.

5. AI: Between Buzzword and Budget Catalyst

AI is the most discussed budget topic heading into 2026. Ninety-nine percent of CISOs agree it will transform cloud security, but just over half say that transformation is happening now.

The key is to separate efficiency gains from innovation bets. Efficiency investments, like AI for triage, anomaly detection, or exposure correlation, should show measurable ROI through faster response or reduced analyst hours. Innovation bets, like securing AI models and pipelines, belong in long-term R&D budgets where value accrues over time.

Some CISOs are also working with enterprise AI teams to co-fund security initiatives that protect AI assets while advancing broader innovation goals. That framing earns visibility and shared ownership across the business.

AI hype will evolve, but the financial discipline around it should remain: budget for outcomes, not for headlines.

6. Rethink Compliance as a Dual-Purpose Investment

Forty-four percent of security leaders say compliance spending doesn’t significantly improve their security posture. Yet compliance remains a board-level priority, and it can be a powerful proof point when positioned correctly.

Mature programs are folding compliance into broader risk reporting. They show where regulatory controls overlap with real risk reduction: a view that satisfies both auditors and executives.

The message for 2026: compliance is the minimum standard, but it doesn’t have to be a sunk cost. When mapped to security outcomes, it becomes part of the ROI story.

7. The 2026 Mandate: Show the Yield

CISOs are entering 2026 with bigger budgets, greater scrutiny, and higher expectations. The measure of success will be how effectively those funds translate into measurable reductions in risk.

Three budgeting disciplines stand out among leading programs:

  1. Quantify outcomes. Every investment should have a defined risk-reduction target.

  2. Reinvest efficiency. Savings from tool and process simplification should fund visibility and resilience improvements.

  3. Treat AI with focus. Invest where automation accelerates outcomes and governance maintains control.

Budget growth is no longer a sign of success by itself. Performance is. CISOs who can demonstrate that each dollar buys more protection, insight, or speed than it did a year ago will set the benchmark for 2026 and beyond.

Download the full 2026 CISO Budget Benchmark Report to benchmark your metrics against 300+ security leaders and see how your approach to budgeting stacks up.

Continue reading

Get a personalized demo

Ready to see Wiz in action?

"Best User Experience I have ever seen, provides full visibility to cloud workloads."
David EstlickCISO
"Wiz provides a single pane of glass to see what is going on in our cloud environments."
Adam FletcherChief Security Officer
"We know that if Wiz identifies something as critical, it actually is."
Greg PoniatowskiHead of Threat and Vulnerability Management