Microsoft announced Thursday it will raise prices for its Office productivity software subscriptions starting July 1, 2026. The increases will hit commercial and government clients across multiple subscription tiers.
The price changes mark the second commercial Office price hike in four years. Microsoft last bumped up business subscription costs in 2022.
Microsoft Corporation, MSFT
Front-line workers will feel the biggest impact. The Microsoft 365 F1 subscription will jump 33% from $2.25 to $3 per user per month. The F3 plan will rise 25% from $8 to $10.
Small and medium-sized businesses face double-digit increases. Microsoft 365 Business Basic will cost $7 per person monthly, up 16.7% from $6. Business Standard climbs 12% to $14 from $12.50.
Business Premium subscriptions will stay at $22 per month. The entry-level Office 365 E1 for enterprises remains at $10.
Enterprise customers will see more modest increases. Office 365 E3 jumps 13% to $26 from $23. Microsoft 365 E3, which includes Windows updates, rises 8.3% to $39 from $36.
The top-tier Microsoft 365 E5 increases 5.3% to $60 from $57 per user monthly. Government clients will face similar percentage increases, rolled out according to local regulations.
Nicole Herskowitz, corporate vice president for Microsoft 365 and Copilot, justified the increases in a blog post. She pointed to continuous platform investment and innovation.
The company released more than 1,100 features across Microsoft 365, Security, Copilot, and SharePoint in the past year. Herskowitz said these new features have added value to the suites.
Microsoft’s Office applications face mounting pressure from Google’s competing products. Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook remain dominant but competition has intensified in recent years.
The price increases come as Microsoft pushes deeper into AI-powered productivity tools. The company offers Copilot as a $30 monthly add-on. Some companies have rolled out Copilot widely while others have paused deployments.
Microsoft changed Office 365’s name to Microsoft 365 in 2020. The company launched the original Office 365 subscriptions in 2011. Microsoft raised consumer Office bundle prices in January 2025.
The company has reduced direct volume deals for certain customer types. Many organizations receive discounts off list prices.
Microsoft’s Productivity and Business Processes segment generated almost 43% of the company’s $77.7 billion in fiscal first-quarter revenue. Microsoft 365 commercial cloud services revenue jumped 17% in October. Seats increased 6%, mainly from products targeting small businesses, medium-sized businesses, and front-line workers.
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