
What IT Leaders Need to Consider Before May 2026
Announced March 9, 2026. Generally available May 1, 2026. This guide covers what is in Microsoft 365 E7, how to evaluate the business case, and the questions every organisation should answer before committing.

1. What Is Microsoft 365 E7?
On March 9, 2026, Microsoft announced Microsoft 365 E7 officially branded as ‘The Frontier Suite’, as the first new enterprise licensing tier since E5 launched in 2015. It will be generally available from May 1, 2026, priced at $99 per user per month. E7 is not a new product. It is a bundle. Microsoft has taken four existing or newly announced components and packaged them into a single SKU: Microsoft 365 E5 (the full existing stack of productivity, security, and compliance), Microsoft 365 Copilot (the AI assistant embedded in Office apps), Agent 365 (the new control plane for managing AI agents), and the full Microsoft Entra Suite. Microsoft’s positioning is that organisations have moved beyond AI experimentation and are ready to deploy AI agents at enterprise scale . E7 is the commercial infrastructure for that with the right Microsoft 365 governance and security in place.
Microsoft’s own framing is that E5 was built for the cloud era, and E7 is built for the agentic AI era. That is a fair summary of the shift in intent, even though the technical reality is largely an upgraded bundle.
2. What Is Included in E7
Microsoft 365 E7 pricing bundles the following components. For organisations currently on E5, three of these are net additions.
| Component | E3 ($39/u/mo Jul 26) | E5 ($60/u/mo Jul 26) | E7 ($99/u/mo May 26) |
| Office apps, Teams, Exchange, SharePoint, OneDrive | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Microsoft Defender (XDR, for Endpoint, for Office) | Limited | ✓ Full | ✓ Full |
| Microsoft Intune (device management) | Basic | ✓ Full | ✓ Full |
| Microsoft Purview (compliance, eDiscovery) | — | ✓ Full | ✓ Full |
| Power BI Pro | — | ✓ | ✓ |
| Microsoft Entra ID | Plan 1 | Plan 2 | Full Entra Suite |
| Microsoft 365 Copilot (AI in Office apps) | — | Add-on $30 | ✓ Included |
| Agent 365 (AI agent control plane) | — | — | ✓ Included |
The Entra Suite Upgrade
The move from Entra ID Plan 2 (included in E5) to the full Entra Suite is one of the more substantive additions in Microsoft 365 E7 pricing. The Entra Suite adds five capabilities not present in E5:
- Microsoft Entra Private Access: Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) for on-premises applications, effectively a modern VPN replacement using Conditional Access with real-time risk signals
- Microsoft Entra Internet Access: cloud-delivered web filtering and security with traffic routed through Microsoft’s global network and Conditional Access integration
- Microsoft Entra ID Protection: extended risk detection for hybrid environments including on-premises Active Directory
- Microsoft Entra ID Governance: automated joiner-mover-leaver lifecycle management, provisioning workflows, and over-permissioning prevention
- Face Check with Verified ID: biometric identity verification using Microsoft Authenticator for high-assurance onboarding and access scenarios
The Entra Suite is available as a $12/user/month standalone add-on for existing E5 customers. In Microsoft 365 E7, it is included.
Agent 365: The New Component
Agent 365 is the genuinely new piece. As organisations deploy more AI agents (automated processes that can take actions across systems, manage tasks, and work alongside employees) IT and security teams need a way to observe, govern, and secure those agents at scale.
Agent 365 provides a unified control plane for AI agent management. It gives IT teams an inventory of all agents running across the organisation, visibility into adoption rates, security risk signals, and the Microsoft governance infrastructure to manage agent identities (via Entra), compliance controls (via Purview), and security posture (via Defender). Microsoft’s stated position is that AI agents should be licensed and managed like human employees. They need identities, access controls, and compliance guardrails. Agent 365 is the tooling that makes that practical at scale. Standalone, it is priced at $15 per user per month.
👉 ⚠ Key Consideration: ‘ Per user per month’ for an agent governance tool is a notable pricing model. You are paying for agent governance capacity on a human headcount basis, not on the number of agents deployed. Organisations with large agent deployments relative to their user count should model this carefully
3. Does the Pricing Make Sense? A Financial Model
Microsoft claims E7 is ‘priced below purchasing these capabilities à la carte.’ That is technically true, but Gartner has noted the discount is approximately 13%, which is less generous than the discount embedded in E5 relative to its components. Here is what the numbers look like for an E5 customer considering upgrading.
| Scenario (per user / month) | Cost/User | 1,000 seats/yr | 5,000 seats/yr |
| M365 E5 (from July 2026) | $60 | $720,000 | $3,600,000 |
| + M365 Copilot add-on | $30 | $360,000 | $1,800,000 |
| + Entra Suite add-on | $12 | $144,000 | $720,000 |
| + Agent 365 standalone | $15 | $180,000 | $900,000 |
| A la carte total (post-Jul 26) | $117 | $1,404,000 | $7,020,000 |
| M365 E7 bundle | $99 | $1,188,000 | $5,940,000 |
| Annual saving vs. a la carte | $18 / user | $216,000 | $1,080,000 |
The $18 per user per month saving is real. But it only holds if every user in scope genuinely needs all four components. The more important question is how many of your users actually use Copilot today, and how many will realistically benefit from agents in the next 12 months. For most organisations, that is not everyone
👉 ⚠ Key Consideration: Avoid the bundling trap. If you deploy Microsoft 365 E7 organisation-wide but only 40% of users actively use Copilot, you are subsidising the other 60% with AI capacity they are not consuming. A tiered approach . Microsoft 365 E7 suits power users and AI-intensive roles, while E5 or E3 works better for lower-intensity users. This tiered approach is almost always more cost-effective than blanket deployment.
4. Five Things to Consider Before Committing
1. Start with a Copilot adoption audit, not a licensing conversation
The real question is not simply whether to buy Microsoft 365 E7. It is: how deeply embedded is AI in how our people work today, and how mature do we want to be in 12 months?’ Organisations that have not yet deployed Copilot, or where Copilot adoption is below 50% of existing licensed users, are not yet E7 candidates. The product is designed for organisations that have passed the experimentation phase. Buying E7 to begin that journey is an expensive starting point.
A Copilot adoption report from the Microsoft 365 Admin Center (Reports > Microsoft 365 Copilot) will show you exactly where you are. If average active usage across your Copilot-licensed users is high and growing, Microsoft 365 E7 is a natural next step. If it is low, the priority is improving adoption, not upgrading the licence tier.
2. Model the agent deployment roadmap before pricing Agent 365
Agent 365 is priced at $15/user/month as a standalone product, and it is the centrepiece of Microsoft 365 E7’s value story. But agent governance is only valuable if you are actually deploying agents at meaningful scale. Before the May 1 launch, organisations should map their current and planned agent deployments: which business processes are candidates for agent automation, which departments are piloting, and what the realistic 12-month agent roadmap looks like. If that roadmap is early-stage, the Agent 365 premium in E7 is not yet earning its cost.
3. The July 2026 pricing changes compound the E7 decision
Microsoft 365 E7 does not launch in isolation. From July 1, 2026, M365 E3 moves to $39/user/month and E5 moves to $60 per user per month, increases of 8 to 9% across the board. Volume discounts were already eliminated in November 2025. For organisations facing both a price increase on their existing licences and a new premium tier, the renewal conversation is more complex than it has been at any point since 2015. Organisations whose EA renewals fall in mid-to-late 2026 face the compounded impact of July pricing plus the E7 decision in the same negotiation window.
If your EA renews between May and December 2026, you are in the window where both the July price increases and the Microsoft 365 E7 bundle are live simultaneously. Get your financial model built now, not in the month before renewal.
4. Governance readiness must precede agent deployment
Agent 365 provides the tooling for agent governance. But tooling is not the same as readiness. Before deploying AI agents at scale, organisations need to have answered several questions that are organisational, not technical: who owns agent governance, what is the approval process for deploying a new agent, how are agent actions audited, what is the data access policy for agents operating on customer or employee data, and how does agent behaviour sit within existing regulatory obligations (particularly relevant for financial services, healthcare, and public sector organisations in NIS2 scope)? Buying Microsoft 365 E7 without those conversations in place means purchasing the security tools before the security rules exist. The governance framework and the technology decision should happen together, not one after the other
5. Validate the Gartner discount assessment against your specific mix
Gartner’s analysis puts the Microsoft 365 E7 bundle discount at approximately 13% compared to purchasing components separately. That is the organisation-wide average across all four components. Your specific discount depends on your current licence mix, your add-on coverage, and how much of the Entra Suite you are already using. Some organisations will find the E7 saving closer to $25-30/user when factoring in their existing add-on expenditure. Others, particularly those already on E5-only with no Copilot and no Entra Suite, will find the savings are thinner until they are genuinely ready to activate all components.
All five of these considerations point to the same underlying need: you cannot make good decisions about E7, or any Microsoft license management decision, without clear visibility into how your current licences are actually being used. That requires a governance process and the right tooling to support it.
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5. Who Should Consider E7 and Who Should Wait
| Organisation Profile | Recommendation | Rationale |
| On E5, Copilot widely adopted, agents in active deployment | Strong E7 candidate | All components delivering value. Bundle saving of $18/user/month is real and immediate. |
| On E5, Copilot licensed but adoption below 50% | Improve adoption first | The E7 premium is not justified until Copilot is embedded. Focus on usage before upgrading. |
| On E5, no Copilot, agent roadmap early-stage | Wait and plan | E5 + selective add-ons remains more cost-effective. Build the adoption and governance foundation first. |
| On E3, evaluating upgrade path | Consider E5 + Copilot add-on | E7 at $99 is a large jump from E3 at $39. An E5 with targeted Copilot deployment is a more measured step. |
| Regulated industry (financial services, healthcare, public sector) | Proceed carefully, governance first | Agent deployment in regulated environments requires compliance framework before technology procurement. |
| EA renewing May-December 2026 | Model urgently | July pricing changes and E7 launch create a complex negotiation window. Financial modelling should be complete before renewal conversations begin. |
6. The Bigger Picture: What E7 Signals
Microsoft 365 E7 matters beyond what is in the box. It is Microsoft’s clear move to charge for the agentic AI era through per-seat licensing. Organisations that deploy agents do not just pay for the compute those agents use, they pay for the governance infrastructure (Agent 365), the identity layer (Entra Suite), and the compliance controls (Purview) on a per-human-user basis.
This is a deliberate commercial choice. By pricing agent governance on a per-human-user basis rather than per agent, Microsoft ties its revenue to headcount rather than agent count. As agent density increases, with more agents per organisation and more tasks per agent, Microsoft’s per-seat model becomes more attractive than consumption-based pricing models. For customers, this means licensing complexity in the M365 estate will grow alongside agent adoption, not shrink.
For IT and procurement leaders, the key takeaway is that licence strategy and AI strategy are now the same conversation. You cannot make a good Microsoft 365 E7 decision without knowing your agent deployment plans. You cannot negotiate your EA effectively without knowing which users are genuinely getting value from Copilot. The organisations that come out ahead will be those that treat licence management as an ongoing discipline rather than something they revisit once a year at renewal time.
Microsoft 365 E7 is more than a licence upgrade. It signals that Microsoft’s per-seat model now covers the AI era too. Every organisation’s licence strategy needs to reflect that, whether or not they buy E7 on May 1.
E7 Readiness Checklist
Before your organisation commits to Microsoft 365 E7, ensure the following questions have been answered:
- Copilot adoption baseline: what percentage of currently licensed Copilot users are active monthly?
- Agent inventory: how many AI agents are currently deployed, and how many are planned in the next 12 months?
- Agent governance framework: is there a defined owner, policy, and approval process for agent deployment?
- Entra Suite gap analysis: which of the five Entra Suite capabilities are currently unlicensed and actively needed?
- EA renewal timeline: when does the current agreement renew, and does that fall in the May-December 2026 E7 window?
- User segmentation: which roles genuinely need E7-level capability, and which are better served by E5, E3, or a targeted add-on approach?
- Financial model: has a per-seat cost comparison between E7, E5 + add-ons, and current spend been completed at current and July 2026 prices?
- Regulatory review: for regulated organisations, has the compliance team reviewed agent data access and audit requirements under applicable obligations?
Key Sources
- Microsoft Blog, Introducing the First Frontier Suite Built on Intelligence + Trust, March 9, 2026
- Microsoft Partner Community Blog, Introducing Microsoft 365 E7: The Frontier Suite, March 9, 2026
- Microsoft Learn, Agent 365 General Availability, May 1, 2026
- Microsoft, Advancing Microsoft 365: Pricing and Packaging Updates, December 2025
- Gartner, analysis of Microsoft 365 E7 bundle discount (cited in The Register, March 9, 2026)
- Directions on Microsoft, Microsoft 365 E7: A New Agent-Centered Subscription Plan, March 2026
- TeamsFox, The 2026 Microsoft EA Renewal Playbook, February 2026
- TeamsFox, The IT Leader’s Guide to Microsoft 365 License Management, February 2026