Microsoft has announced a new E7 license priced at $99 per user per month. This offering integrates the E5 license ($57 per user per month, set to increase to $60 after July 1, 2026), Copilot M365 ($30 per user per month), Entra Suite ($12 per user per month), and the newly priced Agent 365 ($15 per user per month).
This is particularly bold considering that, despite Microsoft’s attempts over the past two years to get organizations to pay an extra $30 per month for M365 Copilot, only 15 million users (or 3.3% of paid commercial Office subscribers) have made the switch.
Combining several licenses into a single package can simplify procurement, but it may also increase an organization’s reliance on the Microsoft ecosystem.
Although the E7 is Microsoft’s priciest SKU, it does not offer a truly comprehensive bundle.
If the E7 were to be compared to a buffet, it would resemble one in which desserts require an additional fee and beverages are billed based on consumption.
The E7 license excludes features from the Teams Premium license, which costs $10 per user per month with annual billing, or $12 per user per month at Microsoft’s usual 20% premium rate for monthly billing.
Some features once exclusive to Teams Premium, like Advanced Town Hall and Microsoft Places integrations, are now included in Teams “core” suites (as of April 1, 2026). However, Teams Premium is still needed for certain other capabilities:
Advanced security: end-to-end encryption for meetings, watermarking, sensitive content detection during screen sharing.
Branding and personalization for meetings: custom meeting themes for invites/lobby/pre-join, organization-wide meeting backgrounds, custom Together mode scenes.
Queues App: Advanced call queue features and auto attendant management from Teams, historical reporting, real-time metrics, “silent coaching” controls.
Advanced Bookings and virtual appointments: “Basic” Bookings is included with Microsoft 365 generally, but Teams Premium adds admin analytics/reporting, appointment queue view/management and SMS notifications.
Advanced admin/collaboration controls: custom user policy packages, aggregated Teams Premium usage reporting, advanced collaboration analytics for admins.
Microsoft continues to promote Teams Premium licenses, describing it as “…the only way for customers to experience advanced communication features in Teams meetings, meeting protection, Advanced Collaboration Tools for admins, Intelligent recap, Queues app for Teams Phone and enhanced capabilities for Bookings and virtual appointments.”
Microsoft, if you are reading this, please include Teams Premium capabilities in the E7. Better yet, please abandon the Teams Premium license entirely.
Even with an E7 license, be aware of possible hidden or excess charges to budget for:
AI Agent Execution and Orchestration (Copilot Studio): While E7 gives you the right to govern agents (via Agent 365), it doesn’t always cover the cost of running them. With an M365 Copilot license, which is part of the E7, many agent actions incur no cost; however, high volume automation, a customer-facing agent, or an autonomous agent that is not acting directly on your behalf requires purchasing Copilot Studio Capacity Packs or paying via Azure Pay-As-You-Go. In short, it can be complicated.
SharePoint Agents: SharePoint agents are designed for high-frequency, simple Q&A against specific document libraries. Every time a user without a Copilot or E7 license asks a SharePoint agent a question, a $0.12 charge is generated on your Azure invoice (e.g., a guest user, a frontline worker with a basic F1/F3 license, or an external partner).
Security Compute Units (SCU): The E7 includes full Security Copilot capabilities, but like with the E5, it operates on a capacity model. Microsoft typically allocates a specific number of Security Compute Units (SCUs) based on your seat count (e.g., 400 SCUs per 1,000 licenses); however, intensive prompt-based investigations or complex automated threat hunting will cause you to hit the SCU ceiling. Additional units are billed at a consumption rate (roughly $6/SCU as of 2026).
Microsoft 365 Backup and Archive: If you use the native backup solution to protect SharePoint, OneDrive, and Exchange, you are charged based on the GB/month of data stored.
Power Platform Overages: E7 users get “Premium” rights for Power Apps and Power Automate, but there are still daily request limits. If you have high-frequency flows or apps that trigger thousands of times a day, you may need to purchase Power Platform Request Capacity add-ons to prevent the service from throttling.
E7’s per-seat cost is predictable, but the agent execution and Security Copilot layers are utility-style billing that scales with usage and can grow significantly as your AI agent footprint expands. Larger organizations may be able to negotiate Copilot credit multiplier rates, agentic consumption caps, credit rollover provisions, independent audit rights, and multi-year credit pricing locks.
Strategically, E7 appears designed to support Agentic AI, the move from using AI tools to deploying autonomous AI agents. The E7 which includes Agent 365 treats agents as “digital employees,” providing a way for organizations to give agents their own identities, permissions, and security guardrails. This is consistent with Microsoft’s April 2025 Work Trend Index which predicted the rise of the “agent boss”, employees who manage hybrid teams of people and AI agents.
Pragmatically, bundling Copilot into the E7 may help kickstart the poor paid Copilot adoption, eliminating add-on fatigue, and eliminating the evaluation of Copilot as a separate line item, which made Copilot look expensive compared to the base E3 or E5 license cost.
Introducing the E7 could encourage more companies to move up to the E5 license, now considered a “middle tier,” instead of remaining with E3. This shift would benefit Microsoft.
Microsoft’s list price for E7 is $99 per user per month, but many larger customers are unlikely to pay that full amount. As a new offer, Microsoft is introducing several promotional discounts through December 31, 2026.
Beyond these E7 promotions, Microsoft has also been discounting Copilot aggressively, which matters because Copilot is a major component of the E7 bundle. For large strategic customers, Microsoft has reportedly offered deep Copilot discounts to win market share against rivals such as Google and Anthropic.
In February 2026, Microsoft also offered a 30% Copilot discount to organizations purchasing 300 or more licenses and deploying them to at least 80% of information workers, and that promotion could stack with other discounts.
Through the OneGov agreement, some federal agencies can also receive Microsoft 365 Copilot at no additional cost for up to 12 months for eligible G5 users.
All of this means the real-world price of E7 may be materially lower than its headline list price, especially for larger or more strategic accounts. That improves the economics, but it does not fully settle the value question. Discounts can reduce the sticker shock, but they do not change the fact that E7 still excludes some desirable capabilities and still introduces consumption-based charges that can complicate budgeting.
E7 is strategically rational for Microsoft, commercially attractive in selected cases, but not yet broadly compelling for most customers. Even when discounted, it is best understood as a targeted license for organizations that are already serious about deploying AI at scale, governing digital labor, and operationalizing agents across the business. In those instances, E7 may reduce friction and accelerate adoption.
For most customers, E7 does not yet provide a clear value story. It is expensive, incomplete and layered with enough consumption-based exceptions to make “all-in” budgeting difficult. The smartest way to view E7 is not as the new standard license, but as a premium toolkit for a limited population of users who can fully exploit what it includes.
Microsoft is betting that the future belongs to agent bosses and Frontier Firms. That may prove true. However, until most customers can consistently turn AI enthusiasm into measurable business outcomes, E7 will look less like a must-have bundle and more like an ambitious upsell.