Four products, two plan tiers, and one buyer question: reach Defender through E5 or through add ons on E3. Here is how to decide and what to stop paying for twice.
The Microsoft Defender suite covers devices, email, identity, and SaaS, and the buyer question is rarely whether you need it but whether you should reach it through E5 or through targeted add ons on E3.
This guide is for security and procurement leaders sizing the Defender estate in 2026. Read it with the Microsoft 365 licensing pillar and the Microsoft Practice page so security needs and license cost stay aligned.
Defender is four products under one brand. Each protects a different surface, and they share a single portal and signal graph.
For endpoint, Plan 1 covers core prevention and manual response. Plan 2 adds automated investigation, vulnerability management, and advanced hunting. Microsoft details the split on its Defender for Endpoint plan comparison.
The decision is a cost comparison. E5 bundles the full Plan 2 suite, but if only a subset of users need it, add ons on E3 may cost less.
Routes to the Defender suite
| Route | Best fit | Trade off |
|---|---|---|
| Full E5 | Most users need the stack | Pay for unused features |
| E3 plus add ons | Subset needs Defender | More SKUs to manage |
| Defender for Business | Under 300 seats | Fewer advanced features |
Defender for Business ships with Business Premium and targets organizations under 300 seats. It simplifies enterprise tooling while keeping core endpoint protection.
The biggest Defender saving is not a discount. It is removing duplicate tools that overlap with what E5 already bundles.
The Defender suite spans Defender for Endpoint, Defender for Office 365, Defender for Identity, and Defender for Cloud Apps. Together they cover devices, email, identity, and SaaS, and most are bundled into Microsoft 365 E5 or sold as add ons.
Defender for Endpoint Plan 1 covers core prevention and manual response. Plan 2 adds automated investigation, threat and vulnerability management, and advanced hunting. Plan 2 is the version bundled in E5.
Yes. E5 bundles Defender for Endpoint Plan 2, Defender for Office 365 Plan 2, Defender for Identity, and Defender for Cloud Apps. That bundle is a major part of the E5 security premium.
Yes. Each Defender product sells as a standalone add on on top of an E3 base. Buying two or three targeted Defender add ons can cost less than the full E5 jump.
Defender for Business is built for organizations under 300 seats and ships with Business Premium. It simplifies the enterprise tooling but lacks some advanced hunting and integration features of the E5 stack.
Map what E5 already bundles before buying add ons or third party tools. Estates often pay for endpoint or email security twice because nobody reconciled the E5 entitlements against separate purchases.
Microsoft renewal moves, the EA framework, the M365 SKU framework, the Copilot framework, and the buyer side moves across the full Microsoft estate.
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The largest Defender saving is usually retiring a tool that overlaps with what E5 already bundles.
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