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White Paper / Microsoft 365 Pricing

The Microsoft 365 2026 price change, answered.

A Gartner style response plan for the 2026 Microsoft 365 price and packaging change: overlap analysis, the E7 math, renewal timing levers, and five recommendations.

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This white paper is a buyer side response plan for the Microsoft 365 2026 packaging and pricing change, where E5 rises to about 60 dollars per user, new capabilities fold into the suite, and the E7 Frontier Suite launches, making renewal timing and segmentation the decisive levers.

Key findings

  • Microsoft 365 E5 list rises to about 60 dollars per user per month on July 1, 2026, paired with capabilities absorbed into E5.
  • The absorbed tools overlap with what many enterprises already buy separately, so the added value is partly illusory.
  • Existing customers keep current pricing until renewal, which turns renewal timing into a measurable lever.
  • The E7 Frontier Suite bundles E5, Copilot, Agent 365, and the Entra Suite at about 99 dollars, but only saves money at full use.
  • Renewal timing alone moved the effective increase by 5 to 15 percent across the engagements behind this paper.
  • The five recommendations turn a presented uplift into a segmented, timed, overlap aware renewal.

What is the executive case on the 2026 change?

The 2026 change is a price move and a packaging move at once, and the two interact. New features inside E5 justify the uplift for some estates and duplicate existing spend for others. The estates that come out ahead do not absorb the increase or jump to E7 on instinct. They map overlap, segment seats, and time the renewal.

Microsoft set out the change on its 2026 packaging and pricing update page and its December 2025 announcement. The headline is a roughly five percent E5 rise. The substance is what moves into E5 and whether you already pay for it.

What exactly is changing on July 1, 2026?

E5 list pricing rises to about 60 dollars per user per month, and several capabilities move into the suite. Pricing applies July 1, 2026, with packaging rollouts beginning in June 2026, and existing customers stay on current pricing until renewal.

  • Price: E5 moves from about 57 to about 60 dollars per user per month.
  • Packaging: Security Copilot, Intune Endpoint Privilege Management, Enterprise Application Management, and Cloud PKI fold into E5, with Defender for Office 365 Plan 1 and further Intune features following by August 2026.
  • Notice: at least 30 days notice in the Message Center before packaging changes reach a tenant.

Does the added value justify the increase?

Only where it does not duplicate what you already own. If you license Security Copilot, third party privilege management, or a separate PKI, the new E5 content overlaps spend rather than adding it. The honest test is an overlap map, not the value narrative in the announcement.

How does the E7 Frontier Suite change the math?

E7 bundles E5, Copilot, Agent 365, and the Entra Suite at about 99 dollars per user per month, against roughly 117 dollars bought separately. The saving is real only for seats that need all four. For seats that need identity and productivity but not agents or the full Entra access layer, E7 is overspend wearing the costume of a discount.

Table 1. 2026 Microsoft 365 options at a glance

OptionApprox list per userBest fitBuyer side note
E5 (from July 2026)About 60 dollarsSecurity heavy estatesCheck overlap with current tools
E5 plus CopilotAbout 90 dollarsTargeted Copilot rolloutOnly license proven users
E7 Frontier SuiteAbout 99 dollarsNeed all four productsSavings only at full use
Assemble separatelyAbout 117 dollarsMixed needs by roleRight size per cohort

For the full bundle analysis see our E7 guide, and for the identity component see the Entra Suite guide.

What does a passive response cost?

Absorbing the uplift without analysis is the most expensive option, because it pays for overlap and forfeits the timing lever. The cost of a considered response is a few weeks of analysis. The cost of a passive one compounds across the term.

Table 2. Passive versus considered response

LeverPassive responseConsidered response
OverlapPays twice for absorbed toolsCancels duplicated spend
TimingRenews into new pricingTimes renewal to hold pricing
SegmentationOne bundle for all seatsRight tier per cohort
E7Moves everyone to E7E7 only where all four are used

How should different estates respond?

Response depends on renewal timing and security posture. Three archetypes cover most enterprises.

The near term renewal

Renewal falls before or near the packaging change. This estate has the strongest timing lever and should decide deliberately whether to lock current pricing where the new content does not help.

The security led estate

Heavy security tooling already in place. The priority is overlap analysis, because the absorbed E5 tools most likely duplicate existing spend that can be cancelled to fund the uplift.

The Copilot expanding estate

Actively rolling out Copilot. This estate must model E7 against E5 plus Copilot per cohort, and resist moving every seat to E7 when only a subset needs agents and the full Entra access layer.

What should leadership ask before accepting the uplift?

  • Which absorbed E5 tools do we already pay for elsewhere?
  • When does each agreement renew relative to the packaging change?
  • What share of seats genuinely needs E7, Copilot, or the Entra access layer?
  • What is the post promotion run rate, not the promotional headline?

Where the consensus on the 2026 change is wrong

The consensus splits into two equally flawed positions: absorb the E5 uplift because Microsoft added valuable security tools, or move to E7 for the bundle saving. We disagree with taking either at face value. In about half the estates we benchmarked, the new E5 capabilities overlapped tools the customer already paid for, so the added value was partly illusory, and E7 only saved money for seats that genuinely needed all four products. The buyer side move is to map overlap, segment seats by real need, and time the renewal so you lock current pricing where the new content does not help. Bundle savings that assume full use are marketing, not math.

Editorial photograph of a procurement team modeling license cost scenarios across a large display
Figure 1. The 2026 change rewards segmentation. The estates that win price per cohort against real need rather than moving every seat to the same new bundle.
35 to 45
Microsoft renewals advised 2025 to 2026
5 to 15%
Effective swing from renewal timing alone
~$18
E7 list gap versus buying separately

Source: Redress Compliance advisory engagement file, 2024 to 2026.

A price increase with new features bundled in is the oldest move in software. The question is never whether the features are good. It is whether you already paid for them once.

A worked example: segmenting a ten thousand seat estate

Consider an enterprise with ten thousand E5 seats facing the July 2026 uplift. The passive path renews everyone at the new E5 rate and absorbs the increase, and where a Copilot push is underway, moves a large block to E7 on the bundle narrative. The result is paying the uplift on overlap and paying for E7 agents and Entra access that most seats never use.

The segmented path starts with an overlap map and a usage read. Suppose two thousand seats genuinely need Copilot, of which six hundred need agents and the full Entra access layer, while the wider estate already pays separately for a privilege management tool the new E5 packaging now duplicates. The considered response renews the eight thousand non Copilot seats with the duplicate tool cancelled to offset the uplift, takes E5 plus Copilot for the fourteen hundred Copilot seats without agents, and reserves E7 for the six hundred that use all four products. The difference between the two paths is not rounding. It is a structural gap that compounds across a three year term.

Why timing multiplies the gap

Layer renewal timing on top. Because existing customers hold current pricing until renewal, an estate whose term lands just before the packaging change can lock current pricing on the seats where the new content adds nothing, while an estate that renews just after pays the uplift on every seat. Across the engagements behind this paper, that timing difference alone moved the effective increase by 5 to 15 percent.

How does this play at the renewal table?

The account team will present the uplift as fixed and the new E5 content as a value add that justifies it, then offer E7 as the path to savings. Both framings are negotiable inputs, not facts. The buyer who has done the overlap map and the segmentation arrives with a different conversation: here is what we already own, here is what each cohort actually needs, and here is the timing we will use.

  • Reframe value as overlap: concede the new tools are good, then show which you already pay for, and decline to pay twice.
  • Hold the timing lever visibly: make clear you will time renewals to the packaging change where it helps you.
  • Refuse the blanket E7 move: accept E7 only for the cohort that uses all four products, and price the rest separately.
  • Price the post promotion run rate: treat 2026 promotions as timing tools and negotiate on the rate that survives them.

What about regulated and public sector estates?

Regulated and public sector buyers face the same economics with two extra constraints. First, procurement cycles are long, so the timing lever must be planned quarters ahead, not weeks. Second, some absorbed E5 security capabilities may already be met by mandated tools, which sharpens the overlap analysis rather than softening it. The recommendation is the same, applied earlier: map overlap, segment by need, and schedule the renewal deliberately within the procurement calendar.

How do you run the renewal response?

Treat the response as a project with a timeline anchored to your renewal date. The following shape has worked across the engagements behind this paper.

Twelve to nine months out: map and segment

Build the overlap map against the absorbed E5 capabilities, read actual usage by cohort, and identify which third party tools the new packaging duplicates. Establish the segmentation: base, E5 plus Copilot, and E7 cohorts.

Nine to three months out: model and decide

Model E7 against assembling the parts for each cohort, including the post promotion run rate, and decide renewal timing relative to the packaging change. Line up the cancellations that will fund the uplift.

Three months out: negotiate and execute

Enter the renewal with the overlap map, the segmentation, and the timing decision in hand. Execute the cancellations, lock the cohorts to the right tiers, and record the post promotion run rate so the next renewal starts from an honest baseline.

What are the five recommendations?

These five moves convert a presented uplift into a segmented, timed, overlap aware renewal. They are ordered.

  1. Map overlap first. List every security and management tool you buy today against the capabilities being absorbed into E5, and quantify what you can cancel to offset the uplift.
  2. Time the renewal deliberately. Find your renewal and packaging change dates and decide where renewing before the change preserves current pricing that the new content does not improve.
  3. Segment seats by real need. Match E5, E5 plus Copilot, or E7 to cohorts based on usage, not on a single estate wide standard.
  4. Model E7 against assembling the parts. Price E7 against the components for each cohort, including the post promotion run rate, and adopt E7 only where all four products are genuinely used.
  5. Cancel the duplicates. Remove third party tools the new E5 packaging now replaces, and use the saving to fund the increase rather than stacking spend.

Methodology and scope

The findings reflect Redress Compliance advisory engagements rather than a public survey. Figures are defensible ranges from the engagement file and describe what we observed across a specific client portfolio between 2024 and 2026.

This paper is buyer side and independent. Redress Compliance does not resell Microsoft licensing and is not a Microsoft partner, so the recommendations favor the buyer, not the renewal.

Frequently asked questions

How much is Microsoft 365 E5 increasing in 2026?

E5 list pricing rises from about 57 to about 60 dollars per user per month on July 1, 2026, roughly a five percent increase, paired with new capabilities folded into E5.

When does the increase take effect?

Pricing changes apply July 1, 2026, and packaging changes begin rolling out in June 2026. Existing customers keep current pricing until their renewal, which makes timing a lever.

What is being added to E5?

Capabilities including Security Copilot, Intune Endpoint Privilege Management, Enterprise Application Management, and Cloud PKI, with Defender for Office 365 Plan 1 and further Intune features following by August 2026.

Does the added value justify the increase?

Only where it does not overlap tools you already buy. If you already pay for Security Copilot or third party privilege management, the new E5 content duplicates spend, so map overlap before accepting the uplift.

Should we move to E7?

Only for seats that need all four bundled products. E7 saves money against assembling the parts only at full use, so segment seats and price E7 per cohort rather than moving everyone.

Can we avoid the increase by renewing early?

Timing is a genuine lever. Existing customers hold current pricing until renewal, so renewing before your packaging change date can preserve current pricing where the new content does not help.

Will Microsoft warn us before the change?

Yes. Microsoft provides at least 30 days notice in the Message Center before packaging changes become available in your tenant, which gives you a planning window.

What is the most expensive response?

Absorbing the uplift without analysis. It pays for overlap and forfeits the timing and segmentation levers, and the cost compounds across the term.

Microsoft 365 2026 Price Change White Paper

The full Microsoft 365 2026 Price Change White Paper framework from the Microsoft Practice.

The overlap map, the timing levers, the E7 versus assemble model, and the five recommendations across the Microsoft 365 estate.

Used across more than five hundred enterprise engagements. Independent. Buyer side. Built for procurement leaders running the next renewal cycle.

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