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online services pricing
About this tag
Discussions on WindowsForum.com about online services pricing focus on Microsoft's November 1, 2025 change to collapse Price Levels A–D into a single, web-published price for Online Services under Enterprise Agreements and MPSA. This affects Microsoft 365, Dynamics 365, Windows 365, Defender, GitHub, and other identity, security, and management subscriptions. The move simplifies licensing but is expected to raise costs for many large enterprise customers. Threads analyze the commercial impact, background of volume-based pricing, and implications for renewals and new purchases.
Microsoft’s decision to collapse Price Levels A–D into a single, web‑published price for Online Services will simplify licensing on paper but shift real economic value away from many large enterprise customers — a change that takes effect for renewals and new purchases on November 1, 2025 and...
Microsoft's decision to collapse volume-based price bands for Online Services under Enterprise Agreements into a single, web‑published price is a major commercial shift that will simplify licensing but almost certainly raise bills for many organizations — and reshape how enterprises, partners...
Microsoft has confirmed it will standardize pricing for Online Services sold through its volume‑licensing channels, aligning list prices across Price Levels A–D with the prices shown on Microsoft.com — a change that takes effect for renewals and new purchases beginning November 1, 2025...
Microsoft is standardizing how it prices online services purchased through its volume licensing programs, expanding a single, consistent price across Price Levels A–D to all Online Services sold under Enterprise Agreement (EA) and Microsoft Products and Services Agreement (MPSA), with the change...