As Office 365 Microsoft first announced Office 365 in October 19, 2010, beginning with a
private beta with various organizations, leading into a public beta in April 18, 2011, and reaching general availability on June 28, 2011, with a launch aimed originally at
corporate users. Facing growing competition from
Google's similar service
Google Workspace, Microsoft designed the Office 365 platform to "bring together" its existing online services (such as the
Business Productivity Online Suite) into "an always-up-to-date cloud service" incorporating
Exchange Server (for e-mail),
SharePoint (for internal social networking, collaboration, and a public web site), and
Lync (for communication,
VoIP, and conferencing). Plans were initially launched for small business and enterprises; the small business plan offered Exchange e-mail, SharePoint Online, Lync Online, web hosting via SharePoint, and the
Web App with the enterprise plan also adding per-user licenses for the Office 2010 Professional Plus software and 24/7 phone support. Following the official launch of the service, Business Productivity Online Suite customers were given 12 months to migrate from BPOS to the Office 365 platform. With the release of
Office 2013, an updated version of the Office 365 platform was launched on February 27, 2013, expanding Office 365 to include new plans aimed at different types of businesses, along with new plans aimed at general consumers, including benefits tailored towards Microsoft consumer services such as
OneDrive (whose integration with Office was a major feature of the 2013 suite). The server components were updated to their respective 2013 versions, and Microsoft expanded the Office 365 service with new plans, such as Small Business Premium, Midsize Premium, and Pro Plus. A new Office 365 Home Premium plan aimed at home users offers access to the Office 2013 suite for up to five computers, along with expanded
OneDrive storage and 60 minutes of Skype calls monthly. The plan is aimed at mainstream consumers, especially those who want to install Office on multiple computers. A University plan was introduced, targeted at post-secondary students. With these new offerings, Microsoft began to offer prepaid Office 365 subscriptions through retail outlets alongside the normal, perpetually licensed editions of Office 2013 (which are only licensed for use on one computer, and do not receive feature updates). On March 19, 2013, Microsoft detailed its plans to provide integration with the enterprise
social networking platform
Yammer (which they had acquired in 2012) for Office 365, such as the ability to use a
single sign-on between the two services, shared feeds and document aggregation, and the ability to entirely replace the SharePoint news feed and social functionality with Yammer. The ability to provide a link to a Yammer network from an Office 365 portal was introduced in June 2013, with heavier integration (such as a Yammer app for SharePoint and single sign-on) to be introduced in July 2013. On July 8, 2013, Microsoft unveiled
Power BI, a suite of
business intelligence and self-serve
data mining tools for Office 365, to be released later in the year. Power BI is primarily incorporated into Excel, allowing users to use the
Power Query tool to create spreadsheets and graphs using public and
private data, and also perform
geovisualization with
Bing Maps data using the Power Map tool (previously available as a beta plug-in known as GeoFlow). Users will also be able to access and publish reports, and perform natural language queries on data. As a limited-time offer for certain markets (but notably excluding the US), Microsoft also offered a free one-year
Xbox Live Gold subscription with any purchase of an Office 365 Home Premium or University subscription, until September 28, 2013. From April 15, 2014, Microsoft renamed the "Home Premium" plan to "Home,” and added a new "Personal" plan for single users. In June 2014, the amount of OneDrive storage offered to Office 365 subscribers was increased to 1
terabyte from 20 GB. On October 27, 2014, Microsoft announced "unlimited" OneDrive storage for Office 365 subscribers. However, due to abuse and a general reduction in storage options implemented by Microsoft, the 1 TB cap was reinstated in November 2015. In June 2016, Microsoft made
Planner available for general release. It is considered to be a competitor to
Trello and to other agile team collaboration cloud services. In April 2017, Microsoft announced that with the ending of mainstream support for
Office 2016 on October 13, 2020, access to
OneDrive for Business and Office 365-hosted servers for Skype for Business will become unavailable to those who are not using Office 365 ProPlus or Office perpetual in mainstream support. In July 2019, Microsoft announced that the hosted
Skype for Business Online service would be discontinued on July 31, 2021, with users being redirected to the
Microsoft Teams collaboration platform as its replacement. Since September 2019, Skype for Business Online is no longer offered to new subscribers. In October 2017, the existing Outlook.com Premium service was discontinued and folded exclusively into Office 365, with all Personal and Family subscribers subsequently being upgraded to 50 GB of storage.
As Microsoft 365 For businesses The "Microsoft 365" brand was first introduced at
Microsoft Inspire in July 2017 as an enterprise subscription product, succeeding the "Secure Productive Enterprise" services released in 2016, and combining
Windows 10 Enterprise with Office 365 Business Premium, and the Enterprise Mobility + Security suite including Advanced Threat Analytics,
Azure Active Directory, Azure Information Protection, Cloud App Security and
Microsoft Intune. Microsoft 365 is sold via Microsoft and its cloud services reseller network.
Consumer launch On March 30, 2020, Microsoft announced that the consumer plans of Office 365 would be rebranded as "Microsoft 365" (a brand also used by Microsoft for an enterprise subscription bundle of Windows, Office 365, and security services) on April 21, 2020, succeeding existing consumer plans of Office 365. It is a superset of the existing Office 365 products and benefits, positioned towards "life", productivity, and families, including the
Microsoft Office suite, 1 TB of additional
OneDrive storage and access to OneDrive Personal Vault, and 60 minutes of
Skype calls per month. Under the brand, Microsoft will also add access to its collaboration platform
Teams (which will also add additional features designed around family use), and a premium tier of
Microsoft Family Safety. Microsoft also announced plans to offer trial offers of third-party services for Microsoft 365 subscribers, with companies such as
Adobe (
Creative Cloud Photography),
Blinkist, CreativeLive,
Experian, and
Headspace having partnered. Microsoft 365 Personal and Family succeeded the Office 365 Personal and Home subscriptions, with no change in pricing. Office 365 for small- and medium-sized businesses was also renamed Microsoft 365, with Office 365 Business and ProPlus becoming "Microsoft 365 Apps for business" and "Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise", Office 365 Business Essentials becoming "Microsoft 365 Business Basic", and Office 365 Business Premium becoming "Microsoft 365 Business Standard" (with the existing Microsoft 365 Business product becoming "Microsoft 365 Business Premium"). The Office 365 brand remains in use for its enterprise, education, healthcare, and governmental plans. Microsoft stated that "over the last several years, our cloud productivity offering has grown well beyond what people traditionally think of as 'Office'", citing examples such as
Forms,
Planner,
Stream, and Teams. On October 13, 2022, Microsoft announced that it would be phasing out the Microsoft Office brand, in favor of branding all products under the Microsoft 365 name. This change took effect on
Office.com in November 2022, followed by the Office mobile apps in January 2023. The Microsoft Office brand will still be used for legacy products, including subscription products still carrying the "Office 365" name since the previous Microsoft 365 rebranding, and the "on-premises"/perpetually licensed
Microsoft Office 2021. In December 2024, Microsoft announced that the Microsoft 365 app would be rebranded as the Microsoft 365 Copilot App in an effort to highlight the integration of Copilot features for Microsoft 365 Personal and Home subscriptions. The logo was rebranded to the Copilot logo with an "M365" tag. In March 2025, Microsoft announced that it would bring Copilot for OneDrive to Microsoft 365 Personal and Home subscriptions. Copilot for OneDrive allows consumers to use Copilot to interact with their files stored in OneDrive. == Software and services ==