Microsoft has confirmed that pricing across Microsoft 365 commercial suites will increase from 1 July 2026.
The uplift applies across:
For Enterprise customers, this represents an increase of approximately $3 per user per month on core E3 and E5 suites.
At scale, that becomes material.
But this is not simply a price adjustment.
It coincides with a significant shift in how Microsoft 365 is packaged, bundled and positioned. That makes the period between now and July 2026 strategically important for CIOs and Heads of IT across Ireland and the UK.
Over the past four years, Microsoft has delivered sustained innovation across security, compliance, identity, endpoint management and AI. Historically, much of that capability required separate add-ons.
From 2026, a meaningful portion of that functionality is being consolidated into the core suites.
For example:
Microsoft 365 E3 will now include advanced capabilities such as:
Previously, these represented incremental standalone costs.
Microsoft 365 E5 continues to deepen across:
When comparing 2025 standalone purchases to 2026 bundled inclusion, the embedded value inside the suites increases materially.
Pricing is rising. But so is baseline capability.
Copilot is becoming Core Infrastructure
Another major development is the deeper integration of Copilot Chat.
In 2026, Copilot capabilities extend further into:
For IT leaders, this means AI is no longer a side initiative. It is becoming structurally embedded in the Microsoft 365 estate.
Licensing decisions are now directly linked to governance, data protection and risk management.
There are three practical considerations between now and 1 July 2026.
Customers renewing before 1 July 2026 can lock in current pricing until their next renewal cycle.
For organisations with significant seat volumes, that may influence renewal sequencing or commit term decisions.
This is not about rushing into changes.
It is about understanding the commercial implications early.
In many enterprise and mid-market environments, we consistently see:
Before absorbing a price increase, the more important question is:
Are we extracting full value from what we already own?
The new bundling may create opportunities to consolidate, simplify and remove duplication.
With additional security and management capabilities being absorbed into E3, the commercial and functional gap between E3 and E5 deserves to be re-evaluated.
For some organisations, E3 may now deliver more coverage than previously assumed.
For others with advanced compliance or identity requirements, E5’s expanded footprint may justify its position more clearly.
The point is not to upgrade automatically.
It is to make the decision intentionally.
July 2026 represents a natural inflection point to:
Handled reactively, this becomes a cost conversation.
Handled strategically, it becomes an estate design conversation.
If your organisation has renewal milestones approaching in the next 6–12 months, this is the right time to conduct a structured licensing and capability review.
Not to buy more licences.
But to ensure:
For many of the organisations we work with, a focused review surfaces quick optimisation wins before any pricing change takes effect.
Microsoft 365 pricing is increasing on 1 July 2026.
But the bigger development is the structural expansion of the suites themselves.
For Irish IT leaders, this is an opportunity to step back, review architecture, and ensure your Microsoft estate is configured deliberately for the next phase of security, AI adoption and operational maturity.
The window between now and July matters.
For organisations seeking clarity on Microsoft 365 licensing strategy ahead of July 2026, further details on our approach can be found here - LINK
Richard Nolan is Head of Microsoft Cloud Business at Codec. He advises enterprise and mid-market organisations across Ireland on Microsoft 365 strategy, security architecture and licensing optimisation, helping IT leaders reduce complexity while maximising value from their Microsoft investment.