CMA to Probe Microsoft Windows, Word, Excel, Teams and Copilot Licensing in UK

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Microsoft’s business software empire is under fresh scrutiny in the UK, and this time the Competition and Markets Authority is looking beyond cloud infrastructure into the broader productivity stack that underpins day-to-day work for millions of organisations. The regulator says it will launch a strategic market status investigation into Microsoft’s business software ecosystem from May, examining products including Windows, Word, Excel, Teams and Copilot, and testing whether the company’s licensing and integration practices may be restricting competition. That move follows months of cloud-market findings that already pointed to serious frictions around switching, interoperability and software licensing, and it signals that the CMA wants to tackle the problem at the layer where cloud, operating systems and productivity software increasingly overlap. It is also a warning shot to the wider enterprise software market: the next phase of regulation may focus not just on where data lives, but on how work itself is distributed across competing platforms.

Scales of justice hover over a digital spreadsheet network with Word/Excel icons and a “MAY” calendar tag.Background​

The CMA’s new move did not appear out of nowhere. It is the latest step in a wider regulatory campaign that began with the UK’s cloud services market investigation, which was referred to the regulator by Ofcom in October 2023 after concerns that businesses were struggling to switch cloud providers or run workloads across more than one cloud. The CMA’s provisional findings in January 2025 said competition in the £9 billion UK cloud services market was not working as well as it could, and that this was likely driving higher costs, less choice, less innovation and lower quality service for UK businesses. (gov.uk)
That cloud inquiry is important because it frames Microsoft as more than just a software vendor. In the CMA’s analysis, Microsoft was one of the two largest cloud providers alongside AWS, and the investigation found concerns around egress fees, technical barriers and software licensing. The regulator also said possible remedies could include measures to encourage technical standardisation, reduce switching costs and ensure fair licensing of software. In other words, the CMA already saw licensing and cloud as intertwined parts of the same competitive problem. (gov.uk)
The broader digital markets regime is what gives the CMA sharper tools. The Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 came into force on 1 January 2025 and allows the watchdog to designate firms with strategic market status, or SMS, in relation to a particular digital activity. Once designated, the CMA can impose conduct requirements or pro-competition interventions designed to open markets and address entrenched dominance. The regulator used that framework earlier this year to launch SMS investigations into Apple and Google’s mobile ecosystems, showing that it intends to use the regime aggressively and in phases rather than waiting for every market to finish a traditional inquiry. (gov.uk)
What is especially notable is how quickly the focus has shifted from cloud services to the business software ecosystem sitting above it. The products under review — Windows, Word, Excel, Teams and Copilot — are not random inclusions. They form the front door for many UK organisations into Microsoft’s wider platform, and that makes the investigation about more than one market definition. It is about whether Microsoft can bundle, steer, or condition access in ways that make rivals less viable, even where customers think they are making independent purchasing choices.
The regulator’s language suggests it is paying attention to the whole stack, not just isolated product lines. That is a major strategic development because it means licensing practices that once looked like commercial detail may now be treated as competitive infrastructure. And when a regulator starts asking whether a product suite is functioning as an ecosystem, the remedies can become far more intrusive than a simple pricing adjustment.

Why Microsoft Is in the Frame​

Microsoft sits at the centre of a particularly dense commercial ecosystem. For many businesses, Windows remains the endpoint operating system, Microsoft 365 the productivity layer, Teams the collaboration tool, and Copilot the new AI-inflected interface tying the bundle together. That combination gives the company a structural advantage because the user experience, identity layer, admin tools and procurement channels can all be integrated in ways that feel seamless to customers but difficult for rivals to break into.
The CMA’s concern is not simply that Microsoft is big. It is that market power in one layer can spill into adjacent layers, especially when licensing terms or bundle structures make it harder to mix products from different suppliers. The cloud investigation already flagged concerns that software licensing could distort cloud competition, and now the regulator appears ready to ask whether the same practices also affect the business software market more broadly. (gov.uk)

The licensing question​

Licensing is likely to be the most sensitive issue in the investigation. Enterprise buyers often negotiate across multiple Microsoft products at once, which can blur what looks like a simple discount into a more complex set of dependencies. If one product is cheaper only when paired with another, or if a customer faces friction when deploying non-Microsoft services alongside Microsoft software, the effect can be to preserve dominance without an overt lock-in clause.
That is why the CMA’s framing matters. It is not saying Microsoft has done anything unlawful yet. It is saying the combination of licensing, cloud usage, productivity software and AI integration may create a market structure that limits competition more subtly than a traditional cartel or merger case would. That is a much harder regulatory problem, because it lives in product design, contract architecture and procurement behavior rather than in obvious price-fixing.

Why Copilot changes the stakes​

Copilot adds a new layer to an already complicated ecosystem. AI assistants embedded directly into productivity software can reinforce market power by making the incumbent’s suite more valuable precisely because it is the incumbent’s suite. That creates a feedback loop: the more users adopt the suite, the better the AI integration becomes, and the more costly it may be to leave.
This is why the CMA’s reference to ensuring “a level playing field as AI is rapidly embedded into everyday business software tools” is so significant. It suggests the watchdog is not just interested in old licensing debates dressed up in modern language. It is asking how AI distribution may inherit and even amplify legacy software dominance.

The CMA’s Strategic Market Status Playbook​

The strategic market status regime is designed for exactly this sort of case. Instead of waiting for a full market investigation to conclude and then wrestling with blunt remedies, the CMA can target firms with conduct requirements while the market is still evolving. That makes the process more flexible, faster and, in theory, more effective.
The regulator has already shown how it intends to use the model. Its investigations into Apple and Google’s mobile ecosystems are meant to determine whether those companies have SMS in operating systems, app stores and browsers, and the CMA explicitly said it would consider conduct requirements at the same time. The Microsoft investigation now appears to be following the same pattern: identify an entrenched ecosystem, examine the points of leverage, and prepare to intervene before complaints harden into permanent market structure. (gov.uk)

What SMS designation could mean​

If Microsoft is designated with SMS in business software, the CMA could force changes in how certain products are licensed, bundled or interoperable. That might include requirements around fair access, data portability, technical standardisation or clearer separation between products that are sold as a package and those that should remain available independently.
It could also push the company to support rival services more cleanly, particularly where customers mix Microsoft software with non-Microsoft cloud or collaboration tools. The practical challenge is that every remedy has to balance competition with legitimate integration benefits, because some customers genuinely want a single vendor to reduce complexity. The regulator will need to distinguish convenience from coercion.

Why this differs from older antitrust cases​

Traditional antitrust often works slowly and after damage has already become entrenched. The SMS model is intended to be ex ante, meaning it intervenes before conduct becomes irreversible. That makes it more like a sector regulator’s toolkit than a classic courtroom-style antitrust case.
For Microsoft, that means the risk is not just fines or litigation. The company could face ongoing governance obligations that change how future products are built and sold in the UK. In practical terms, the CMA may seek to redesign market behavior rather than punish past behavior.

Cloud and Business Software Are Becoming One Market​

One of the most important aspects of the investigation is that it reflects a changing industry reality. Cloud, productivity software, operating systems and AI assistants are no longer separate commercial worlds. They are becoming one integrated stack, and that stack gives the largest vendors enormous leverage over how businesses operate.
The CMA’s cloud work already established that switching and multi-cloud usage can be made harder by egress fees, technical barriers and commercial conditions. Now the watchdog is asking whether the software layer sitting above cloud infrastructure can create additional lock-in. If Microsoft can shape both the infrastructure path and the business application path, competitors may need to fight on two fronts at once. (gov.uk)

The customer experience is the market​

For procurement teams, the issue often feels mundane. A business buys Microsoft 365 because it is familiar, easy to deploy and bundled with enterprise agreements. But from a competition perspective, that familiarity can be the result of strategic design rather than pure preference.
The CMA is likely to scrutinise whether the combination of operating system dominance, productivity suite ubiquity and cloud tie-ins leaves customers with limited practical alternatives. If the answer is yes, the market may look open on paper but constrained in real buying behavior. That is the kind of subtle market failure regulators increasingly see as more important than headline market shares.

Enterprise versus public sector impact​

The public sector matters here because government bodies often buy at scale and set templates that private-sector suppliers then follow. If those organisations are locked into a dominant ecosystem, the consequences ripple far beyond one contract. The CMA has already said the cloud findings affect businesses and organisations across the UK economy, and Microsoft software is widely used in public administration as well. (gov.uk)
Enterprises, meanwhile, tend to have more complex multi-year licensing arrangements, which can make switching expensive even when better alternatives exist. That means competition problems may be more visible in large organisations than among small businesses, where procurement is simpler but vendor dependence can still be deep.

What the CMA Is Likely to Examine​

Although the regulator has not published the full scope of the new investigation in the material available here, the announcement strongly suggests several lines of inquiry. The first is licensing, especially where software agreements may reduce competition linked to cloud computing. The second is interoperability, particularly where Microsoft software works best when paired with Microsoft cloud or Microsoft identity services. The third is the emerging role of Copilot and other AI features as value-adds that may further entrench incumbency. (gov.uk)
These topics are not isolated. They overlap in ways that make the analysis difficult. A licensing rule that looks neutral in a vacuum may become anti-competitive once layered onto cloud discounts, data transfer charges and default deployment choices.

Likely evidence categories​

The CMA has a familiar pattern from its previous digital work, and it will probably gather evidence from buyers, rival software vendors, resellers and cloud providers. It will also look at how Microsoft positions bundled products in procurement and whether customers can realistically substitute one component without losing access to others.
Possible evidence areas include:
  • contract structures and enterprise agreements
  • product bundling and discount mechanisms
  • interoperability with third-party cloud platforms
  • switching costs and migration barriers
  • default settings and admin-console behavior
  • AI feature access tied to existing licenses
  • procurement practices in the public sector

Why market definition will matter​

One reason this case is tricky is that Microsoft is not just competing in one market. Windows competes as an operating system, Office as productivity software, Teams as collaboration software, and Copilot as an AI layer. The CMA will need to decide whether these are separate markets, connected markets or part of one broader ecosystem.
That matters because remedies follow the market definition. A narrow definition may produce focused interventions. A broader ecosystem definition could justify broader structural conditions. That distinction will shape the whole case.

Microsoft’s Defence Will Be Familiar, but Not Simple​

Microsoft is already using the language it has deployed in other competition matters: cooperation, transparency and customer benefit. Brad Smith said the company recognises the CMA will continue to review additional issues and is committed to working quickly and constructively, including by providing information the regulator needs to move forward. That response is measured, and deliberately so. It signals compliance without admitting competitive harm.
The company will likely argue that integration is a feature, not a bug. Microsoft has spent decades building enterprise software that reduces friction for customers, and it will almost certainly say that interoperability improvements or licensing changes risk undermining security, reliability and investment incentives. That is a strong argument in some contexts, because enterprise buyers often do want a unified stack.

The integration argument​

Microsoft’s best defence is that customers choose the ecosystem because it works. Bundled identity, security, collaboration and productivity services can lower deployment costs and improve manageability. In many real-world cases, a single-vendor architecture is not coercive; it is operationally efficient.
But that argument becomes weaker if customers only appear to choose the bundle because rival components are disadvantaged in price, access or technical compatibility. The CMA is unlikely to accept “customers like convenience” as a complete answer if the underlying market design has been tilted over time.

The innovation argument​

Microsoft will also likely argue that heavy regulation could slow the very innovation the CMA wants to encourage. AI features are evolving quickly, and software vendors need room to experiment. If regulators freeze product design too early, they may inadvertently lock in older models and discourage investment.
That is a real concern. Overcorrection is possible. Yet regulators increasingly believe that leaving large ecosystems entirely to their own devices can create worse long-term outcomes, especially when the pace of product integration makes market closure irreversible.

How Rivals May Benefit​

The most direct beneficiaries of the investigation could be rival cloud and software vendors that have long argued Microsoft’s licensing and bundle strategy gives it an unfair edge. Smaller providers often compete on specialization, service quality or pricing, but those advantages can be undercut if customers are effectively anchored in a dominant suite.
A more level playing field could help independent productivity software providers, alternative collaboration platforms and cloud competitors that need cleaner interoperation. It could also benefit systems integrators and managed service providers that prefer to build tailored stacks rather than resell one dominant ecosystem. (gov.uk)

Competition effects across the stack​

If the CMA pushes for more interoperable licensing or less restrictive bundling, the effects may extend beyond Microsoft’s immediate rivals. Procurement teams could gain leverage in negotiations, and vendors may need to compete harder on price, features and migration support.
That could gradually shift the market from default-based purchasing to capability-based purchasing. In the short term, that sounds technical. In the long term, it can change who gets to set the standards that businesses adopt by default.

The chance for hybrid environments​

One likely practical outcome is greater acceptance of hybrid software environments. Rather than committing everything to a single vendor, organisations may be able to combine Microsoft’s tools with third-party alternatives more easily.
That may sound modest, but it is not. Hybrid adoption tends to expand the addressable market for competitors, because it lowers the fear of “all or nothing” replacement. Once that fear declines, vendors have to win on merit rather than inertia.

The Broader Political and Economic Significance​

This investigation is also a test of the UK’s post-Brexit digital regulation regime. The CMA is clearly trying to show that it can act fast, use its new powers carefully and deliver tangible market changes without waiting years for litigation to conclude. That matters politically because regulators are under pressure to prove they can support growth while still protecting competition.
The government has signaled that it wants the CMA to prioritise interventions with direct economic impact. The regulator’s annual planning documents stress growth, investment and business confidence, which means the Microsoft case will be watched not just as a competition story but as a test of regulatory maturity. The CMA wants to be seen as pragmatic, not anti-business.

Why the UK is acting now​

The timing is no accident. The cloud market investigation has already laid down much of the evidence foundation, and the CMA’s board had indicated it would decide in the first quarter of 2026 which SMS investigations to prioritise. By moving now, the regulator is showing continuity rather than spontaneity.
There is also a competitive signalling effect. If major vendors know the CMA will scrutinise ecosystem power, they may moderate their behavior before enforcement bites. Regulators like that result because they can shape conduct without necessarily needing to impose the heaviest remedies.

International implications​

Other jurisdictions will be watching closely. Large technology firms increasingly face ecosystem-based regulation in multiple markets, and the UK’s SMS model may become a template for how to intervene in cloud, productivity and AI markets without resorting to outright breakups.
That is especially relevant because Microsoft’s global footprint means any UK remedy could influence product design elsewhere. Even if the legal obligation is local, the operational response may be global. That is how digital regulation often works in practice.

Strengths and Opportunities​

The CMA’s action has several clear strengths. It is targeted at a market where concerns have already been documented, it uses powers that were specifically designed for digital ecosystems, and it addresses the point where cloud, software and AI now overlap. That makes the investigation more likely to produce meaningful change than a narrower, legacy-style complaint process.
  • It builds on an established cloud market record rather than starting from scratch.
  • It targets ecosystem power where user dependence is highest.
  • It could improve switching and multi-cloud usage for UK organisations.
  • It may force cleaner interoperability across competing software stacks.
  • It gives smaller rivals a better chance to compete on product quality.
  • It aligns regulation with the reality of AI being embedded into business software.
  • It could improve bargaining power for public and private sector buyers.

Practical upside for customers​

For customers, the biggest opportunity is choice. If the CMA succeeds, businesses may be able to move between cloud and productivity providers with less disruption and lower migration cost. That could translate into better pricing and fewer long-term lock-in effects.
There is also a strategic benefit for the UK economy. Markets that are easier to enter and easier to contest tend to support more innovation, because startups and challengers can reach users without first clearing artificial barriers. That is why competition policy often looks abstract until it starts shaping procurement behavior.

Risks and Concerns​

The biggest risk is that the regulator may overestimate how much friction is caused by anti-competitive conduct versus genuine technical integration. Enterprise software is messy, and not every bundle, discount or compatibility issue is evidence of abuse. The danger is that intervention could weaken useful integration without materially increasing competition.
  • Heavy remedies could reduce product coherence for customers who prefer one vendor.
  • Changes to licensing could create new complexity for enterprises managing large estates.
  • Microsoft may respond with slower UK-specific product rollout or contract rework.
  • Rival vendors may benefit unevenly, especially if they cannot match Microsoft’s scale.
  • AI-related remedies may become outdated quickly if products evolve faster than regulation.
  • A broad case could stretch the CMA’s monitoring capacity.
  • Customers could face transitional disruption if remedies are implemented too aggressively.

The compliance burden​

A second concern is compliance complexity. If the CMA imposes conduct requirements, Microsoft may need to alter contracts, product settings, procurement pathways and technical integration points across multiple services. That can be expensive, slow and hard to supervise.
There is also the risk of legal and operational ambiguity. The more detailed the remedy, the more likely it is to generate disputes about what counts as fair access or acceptable bundling. That kind of ambiguity can itself become a barrier.

The innovation trade-off​

The final concern is innovation. AI is moving fast, and regulators are wary of fixing markets just as new product models are emerging. If the CMA sets the wrong constraints, it might inadvertently slow the rollout of features that genuinely help businesses become more productive.
That does not mean regulation is unwarranted. It means the remedy design will be just as important as the diagnosis. A good case can still produce a bad remedy.

Looking Ahead​

The next phase will be about scope, evidence and timing. The CMA has already shown that it is willing to move from market study to SMS investigation once it believes the regulatory tools are justified, and Microsoft’s business software ecosystem appears to be the next arena where that logic will play out. Because the regulator has said its cloud review is effectively closed and that it expects to prioritise further SMS investigations in the first quarter of 2026, the new probe fits a broader strategy rather than a one-off announcement.
What matters now is whether the CMA can connect the dots between cloud, licensing and AI in a way that produces remedies customers can actually feel. That will mean proving not only that Microsoft has scale, but that its business practices create practical barriers that rivals cannot overcome through ordinary competition. The stronger the evidence, the more likely the regulator is to push for conduct requirements rather than wait for market forces to correct themselves.
  • Watch for the formal launch details and scope statement in May.
  • Watch for evidence calls from cloud providers, software rivals and enterprise buyers.
  • Watch for Microsoft to sharpen its interoperability and customer-choice messaging.
  • Watch for the CMA to link this probe to any future cloud or AI enforcement steps.
  • Watch for public sector buyers to welcome, or quietly pressure for, clearer licensing options.
The broader lesson is that competition policy is moving from products to ecosystems, and from isolated pricing concerns to structural power. If the CMA is right, the most important market problem is not a single software product, but the way dominant platforms shape the choices around them. If it gets the balance right, UK businesses could end up with more freedom, more interoperability and better pricing. If it gets it wrong, the result could be a more complicated market without enough competitive gain to justify the disruption.

Source: Ipswich Star Microsoft to face competition watchdog probe over business software
 

Microsoft is heading into a fresh confrontation with the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority, which is preparing to launch a strategic market status investigation into the company’s business software ecosystem from May. The probe will widen scrutiny beyond cloud infrastructure and into the software stack that many UK organizations depend on every day, including Windows, Word, Excel, Teams and Copilot. For Microsoft, this is more than a regulatory nuisance: it signals that the CMA wants to examine how deeply licensing, interoperability and bundled software power may shape competition across the modern enterprise technology market.
The timing matters. Only months after the CMA’s cloud investigation concluded that competition in the UK cloud market was not working as well as it should, the regulator is now moving to a broader question: whether Microsoft’s business software dominance creates barriers that affect cloud choice, switching costs and the emerging AI layer embedded into workplace tools. That puts the company’s productivity suite and operating system business in the crosshairs at the very moment AI is being woven into enterprise software at scale.

Illustration of data analytics with a school building, papers, and network nodes labeled CⓝA, W, X, and T.Overview​

The CMA’s move fits into a much larger shift in UK digital regulation. The regulator is no longer treating market power as a narrow issue confined to one product category at a time. Instead, it is increasingly looking at digital ecosystems, where the value of one product reinforces the control of another. Microsoft’s business software portfolio is a textbook example of that dynamic, because it spans the desktop, productivity tools, collaboration, identity, administration and cloud-adjacent services.
That ecosystem approach also explains why licensing practices are now at the center of the story. The CMA has already heard extensive complaints during its cloud work about the way Microsoft licenses software, particularly where those terms can make it more expensive for customers to run workloads on rival clouds. In a market where most enterprises already rely on Microsoft for some combination of Windows, Office, Teams and Azure, the question is not whether Microsoft is important. The question is whether that importance becomes self-reinforcing in ways that reduce choice.
The new probe comes after a lengthy cloud services market investigation that looked closely at public cloud infrastructure and the costs of switching. In provisional findings last year, the CMA said competition was not working as well as it could and pointed to Microsoft and Amazon Web Services as the two largest providers worthy of further scrutiny under the UK’s digital markets regime. That report also raised software licensing as a possible route to intervention, making the current business software investigation a logical continuation rather than a surprise.
It is also notable that the CMA has not framed this as an isolated punishment exercise. Sarah Cardell has repeatedly argued that the regulator wants to act pragmatically and quickly where possible, and the Microsoft-Amazon cloud concessions announced this week suggest that the CMA prefers negotiated improvements when they are available. But the launch of an SMS investigation into Microsoft’s business software shows the regulator is not satisfied with cloud-only fixes. It wants to test whether the broader software ecosystem itself is part of the competitive problem.

Why this is different from a normal antitrust case​

A standard competition inquiry tends to focus on one market and one obvious price mechanism. This case is wider and more structural. It asks whether Microsoft’s control over the operating system, office apps, collaboration tools and AI-powered productivity software gives it leverage across adjacent markets, especially cloud computing.
That matters because business software markets do not behave like simple consumer goods markets. Enterprise customers rarely buy one product at a time. They buy architectures, contracts, integrations and migration paths. Once a company standardizes on a vendor’s stack, switching costs can become enormous.
  • The issue is not just price.
  • The issue is how product design and licensing shape customer lock-in.
  • The issue is whether interoperability is genuinely open or only selectively open.
  • The issue is whether AI features deepen dependence on the same vendor ecosystem.
The CMA’s SMS framework gives it more flexible tools than older competition law processes. That includes the ability to impose conduct requirements targeted at particular harmful practices, rather than waiting for a full market failure to be proved in the traditional sense. For a market as layered as Microsoft’s, that flexibility could become the whole point.

Background​

Microsoft has long been one of the most powerful names in enterprise software, but the form of that power has changed over time. In the desktop era, Windows and Office dominated office computing through sheer ubiquity. In the cloud era, the company transformed itself into a platform provider whose influence extends across identity, security, collaboration, infrastructure and developer tooling. That evolution has made Microsoft harder to challenge, not easier.
The UK regulator has been tracking these dynamics for years. Earlier CMA work on cloud infrastructure found that cloud customers often face switching frictions, data transfer charges and licensing arrangements that make it harder to move workloads across providers. Those concerns were not abstract. They reflected the reality that companies operating on Azure, AWS and Google Cloud frequently rely on software estates that were built around Microsoft products long before cloud migration became a strategic priority.
The CMA’s cloud case also showed how rapidly the debate has shifted from infrastructure pricing to ecosystem control. In the background papers and provisional findings, the regulator repeatedly returned to concerns that Microsoft’s licensing terms could influence not only where customers host workloads, but whether competitors can compete on fair terms at all. That is an important distinction. It means the regulator is no longer just asking whether cloud services are expensive. It is asking whether software ownership itself can distort infrastructure competition.
Meanwhile, AI has complicated the picture further. Copilot has become more than a feature name; it is now part of Microsoft’s strategy to bind productivity, search, workflow and document generation into one integrated workspace. That integration may be attractive to customers. It may also make the ecosystem more difficult to replace, because the same vendor is increasingly the place where work happens, data lives and assistance is delivered.

From cloud infrastructure to business software​

The CMA’s cloud investigation created the bridge to this next phase. In its January 2025 provisional findings, the inquiry group recommended that the CMA consider SMS investigations into Microsoft and AWS for cloud services, while also noting that interventions might include fairer software licensing and reduced switching costs. That language was telling because it acknowledged that cloud competition problems do not live only in the cloud.
The regulator’s latest move suggests it agrees. By broadening the lens to the business software ecosystem itself, the CMA can examine whether the licensing and bundling structure behind Windows, Office, Teams and Copilot has consequences that are larger than any one product market.
  • Cloud migration is influenced by desktop software licensing.
  • Collaboration tools can reinforce cloud preferences.
  • Enterprise agreements can bundle more power into fewer contracts.
  • AI assistants may make lock-in more durable, not less.
This is why the market status investigation is so important. It is not merely a follow-on review. It is a recognition that the competitive problem may sit at the center of Microsoft’s business model rather than only at the edge of it.

The significance of SMS designation​

A strategic market status designation would not automatically mean Microsoft has done anything illegal. Instead, it would confirm that the CMA believes the company has substantial and entrenched market power in a specific digital activity. That designation then unlocks a more interventionist regime, including tailored conduct obligations.
For businesses, that could matter more than a one-off fine. It could lead to rules about how licenses are structured, how services interoperate, how data can be moved and how AI features are deployed in default enterprise workflows. In other words, it is a regulatory lever aimed at the plumbing of competition, not just the billing department.

What the CMA is likely testing​

The CMA’s language points to several overlapping concerns. First, it appears to be looking at whether Microsoft’s business software licensing practices make it harder for customers to use competing cloud providers. Second, it wants to understand whether the company’s broader software position gives it an unfair advantage when businesses buy productivity and collaboration tools. Third, it is likely considering whether AI integration could amplify existing market power.
These are not separate questions. They are mutually reinforcing. If a customer is deeply embedded in Microsoft’s productivity stack, then moving a workload away from Azure may become harder. If the collaboration layer is also tied to Microsoft identities and document workflows, the friction increases again. If Copilot becomes a default productivity layer, the vendor can potentially extend influence into the user interface through which work is increasingly organized.
That is why the CMA’s framing around “the business software ecosystem” is so notable. It suggests the regulator is not only interested in products sold individually, but in the architecture of dependency built across the stack. That kind of architecture can be commercially efficient for users, but it can also create market power that outlives the competitive pressure of a single product cycle.

Licensing as competitive leverage​

Licensing has become one of the most contested battlegrounds in cloud competition. In practical terms, a software vendor can use license terms to make some deployment patterns cheaper than others. If the result is that one cloud is easier or less expensive to use with a given software product than another, the vendor may be indirectly steering customers toward its preferred environment.
That is precisely the sort of issue regulators hate because it is subtle, technical and difficult for customers to spot in advance. It also tends to be experienced only after a company has already invested time and money in migration or procurement. That creates a classic inertia trap.
  • Licensing can determine where software can be run.
  • Licensing can affect the economics of multi-cloud strategies.
  • Licensing can shape how independent resellers package services.
  • Licensing can create hidden switching costs that look like normal procurement complexity.
The CMA has already signaled that it views these effects as competition issues, not just commercial disputes. If it decides the market status threshold is met, licensing rules may become one of the first areas for conduct remedies.

Windows, Office, Teams and Copilot as a system​

Individually, these products are familiar. Together, they form a system that is much more powerful than the sum of its parts. Windows still anchors device management and desktop compatibility. Word and Excel remain foundational business tools. Teams is the collaboration layer that connects meetings, chat and file sharing. Copilot is the emerging AI interface that may sit on top of all of them.
This stack matters because enterprise customers tend to optimize for continuity. They prefer software that works with their existing identities, security policies and document formats. Microsoft’s great competitive strength is that its products do work together, very well. The CMA’s challenge is to determine whether that integration crosses the line into foreclosure.

The cloud connection​

The cloud dimension is crucial because it explains why a probe into business software is really a probe into market structure. Microsoft’s enterprise software dominance is not just about desktops or office productivity. It also affects how customers purchase and deploy cloud services. That makes the business software ecosystem a transmission mechanism for power in another market.
The CMA has already said that it heard concerns about software licensing reducing competition in cloud computing. That concern is especially important for companies trying to run mixed environments across multiple providers. If using Microsoft software on rival clouds is more complicated or expensive, then customers may feel pushed toward Azure even if they would prefer a multi-cloud setup.
That is why the regulator has been so focused on cloud egress fees and interoperability. Those issues deal with the mechanics of movement. But movement is only meaningful if the software stack above the infrastructure does not quietly reimpose the same barriers. The CMA’s latest step suggests it suspects the latter may be happening.

Why multicloud is hard in practice​

In theory, multicloud should give customers resilience, pricing leverage and bargaining power. In practice, it can be messy. Different clouds offer different services, APIs, billing models and support arrangements. Add Microsoft software licensing into the mix, and the complexity grows again.
The result is often that companies talk about cloud optionality but build around one dominant vendor anyway. That is not always because they want to. Sometimes it is because the cheapest path is also the least flexible one.
  • Multi-cloud needs genuine interoperability.
  • Migrating data must be feasible without punitive charges.
  • Licenses should not penalize customers for choosing rivals.
  • Enterprise procurement should not hide structural dependency.
The CMA appears to be testing whether Microsoft’s ecosystem makes the promise of multicloud more theoretical than real. If so, the consequences extend beyond cloud prices to innovation, resilience and bargaining power across the wider economy.

Azure is only part of the picture​

It would be a mistake to treat this as an Azure-only issue. Azure is obviously central, but the competitive effect may flow through broader software usage patterns. If customers rely on Microsoft productivity tools and identity systems, Azure may benefit indirectly even when the customer does not consciously choose it as a strategic standard.
That is what makes ecosystem cases so difficult. Power often operates through defaults, compatibility and habit rather than explicit lock-in. In modern enterprise technology, those can be just as influential as a formal contract clause.

Enterprise customers versus public sector buyers​

The CMA says the software under investigation is used by hundreds of thousands of UK firms and public sector organizations. That scale matters because the impact of any remedy would ripple across both commercial and government procurement. Yet the risk profile is not identical in each sector, and the regulator will know that.
Enterprise buyers may have more bargaining power, larger technical teams and more ability to negotiate custom terms. Public sector organizations, by contrast, often depend on framework contracts, shared standards and long-lived procurement paths. If Microsoft’s ecosystem creates friction in one sector, the other may feel it differently.
This distinction is important because public sector digital transformation often depends on vendor ecosystems that promise easy integration and productivity gains. But those gains can be offset if procurement becomes harder to unwind later. A remedy that improves transparency in licensing could therefore help both sectors, though perhaps in different ways.

Public procurement and standardization​

Government departments and agencies often value consistency more than cutting-edge flexibility. That makes Microsoft’s suite especially attractive, because it offers familiar tools, common administrative controls and a well-worn support model. But that same standardization can magnify dependency.
If the CMA concludes that business software markets are being shaped by entrenched dominance, public sector buyers may be among the biggest beneficiaries of clearer rules. Better licensing clarity and more predictable interoperability could reduce procurement risk over time.
  • Public sector buyers need predictable costs.
  • They also need easier exit paths.
  • Standardization should not become permanent lock-in.
  • AI procurement will likely sharpen the same concerns.

Enterprise transformation and hidden switching costs​

For private sector firms, the issue is often less about policy and more about architecture. Companies modernizing their IT estates want to move fast, but they also want continuity for users. That makes Microsoft ecosystems appealing. Yet once the stack is in place, the business may become less agile than it appears.
This is the kind of market problem regulators increasingly target: not the upfront sales pitch, but the long tail of dependency. If the CMA wants to tackle the structural cause rather than the symptoms, this is where it will focus.

Microsoft’s response and the competitive counterargument​

Microsoft is not approaching this as a company blindsided by regulation. Brad Smith has already said the company recognizes the CMA will continue to review issues relating to its products and services, including the business software market. He also said Microsoft is committed to working quickly and constructively with the regulator.
That is a familiar posture, but it should not be dismissed as mere public relations. Microsoft understands that the best outcome is often to shape remedies before they become rigid obligations. In recent years, the company has repeatedly chosen to negotiate, adapt or concede on selected issues rather than fight every battle to the end.
At the same time, Microsoft will almost certainly argue that its integrated product strategy reflects customer demand, not anti-competitive intent. It will say businesses buy its software because it is secure, interoperable, widely supported and productive. It will also likely point out that rivals remain strong in many segments, especially where open standards and alternative collaboration tools are available.

The efficiency defense​

This is the strongest argument on Microsoft’s side. Integrated ecosystems can reduce complexity for customers. If a company can manage devices, identities, documents, collaboration and AI through one platform, that can lower overhead and improve security oversight. For many firms, especially smaller ones, that is a genuine benefit.
The difficulty for regulators is separating real efficiency from market foreclosure. Sometimes the same design choice does both. A bundle that simplifies procurement can also close off competition, and a seamless user experience can also make switching harder.
  • Integration can be a feature, not a flaw.
  • Customer demand matters.
  • Security and manageability are legitimate concerns.
  • But convenience can still mask market power.

Why Microsoft’s AI strategy complicates the defense​

Copilot raises the stakes because it is not simply another feature inside a mature suite. It is an interface to work itself. If the AI layer becomes the place where users search, write, summarize and act, Microsoft gains a new control point at the top of the stack.
That matters because AI may not reduce lock-in; it may intensify it. The more the assistant understands a customer’s documents, meetings and workflows, the more valuable it becomes to stay inside the ecosystem. That is commercially brilliant and competitively sensitive at the same time.

Amazon, cloud competition and the wider market​

Amazon’s role in the story is a reminder that this is not just a Microsoft problem. The CMA has also been dealing with AWS and cloud competition more broadly, and Amazon says it remains focused on choice, flexibility and customer trust. In the regulator’s view, both companies have already made some changes on egress fees and interoperability, but further action is still expected.
That makes sense. The cloud market is not a simple duopoly in the everyday sense, but it does have a concentration problem. Large enterprises rely on a small number of providers, and that concentration creates leverage. When one dominant software ecosystem overlaps with cloud infrastructure, the combined effect can be stronger than any one firm’s market share suggests.
The competitive implication is that remedies in one layer may not be enough if the adjacent layer remains structurally closed. That is why the CMA seems intent on pressing on multiple fronts. The broader the ecosystem lens becomes, the harder it will be for any one firm to argue that the problem is isolated.

What rivals may hope for​

Competitors to Microsoft will likely welcome the investigation, even if they do not say so publicly. Independent cloud providers, productivity software vendors and AI platform builders all benefit if the CMA can reduce default advantages. Smaller firms in particular often struggle not because they lack technology, but because they cannot dislodge incumbent software habits.
A more level playing field could help them in several ways:
  • Easier switching could make bids more realistic.
  • Fairer licensing could reduce hidden price penalties.
  • Better interoperability could lower onboarding costs.
  • Stronger competition could encourage product specialization.
But rivals will also know that regulation alone cannot create a healthy ecosystem. They will still need better products, better migration tools and better enterprise support. The CMA can open the door; it cannot walk customers through it.

Strengths and Opportunities​

The CMA’s intervention has several strengths, especially if it is disciplined about targeting real frictions rather than trying to redesign the entire software market. This is one of the few areas where a regulator can potentially improve competition without breaking functionality that customers actually value. If done well, the benefits could be broad and durable.
The opportunity is especially strong because the case sits at the intersection of cloud, productivity software and AI. That means any remedy could have effects well beyond one product or one contract type. It could shape procurement norms, interoperability standards and even future AI deployment practices across UK business technology.
  • Better transparency in enterprise licensing could make procurement fairer.
  • Lower switching costs could improve cloud choice for businesses and government.
  • Stronger interoperability could support genuine multicloud strategies.
  • Clearer conduct rules could reduce uncertainty for smaller vendors.
  • AI oversight could prevent a new layer of lock-in from forming unchecked.
  • Public sector buyers may gain more leverage in negotiations.
  • Market discipline could encourage more innovation from incumbents and challengers alike.

Why measured intervention could work​

The best competition remedies usually do one thing well: they remove a bottleneck. They do not try to micromanage product design. In this case, that means the CMA may be most effective if it focuses on licensing fairness, data portability, interoperability and default settings.
If the regulator can identify and fix the specific points where Microsoft’s ecosystem constrains choice, it could improve competition without sacrificing the software quality users expect. That is the sweet spot every market intervention seeks.

Risks and Concerns​

The CMA’s approach also carries real risks. The first is overreach. If the regulator pushes too far into product design or contract standardization, it could accidentally reduce the value of integrated software for customers. The second is complexity. Business software ecosystems are so interdependent that a badly designed remedy can create new friction while attempting to remove old friction.
There is also a danger of regulatory lag. AI, cloud and enterprise software are moving quickly, and a remedy that is too slow could become obsolete before it bites. That is why the CMA’s current emphasis on flexible, pragmatic action matters. It needs to move fast enough to matter, but carefully enough to survive challenge.
  • Overbroad remedies could reduce product quality or choice.
  • Unintended compliance costs could fall on customers as well as vendors.
  • Slow implementation may miss the AI window entirely.
  • Legal challenge risk is high in a case this economically significant.
  • Vendor workarounds could blunt the effect of any rule changes.
  • Procurement disruption could hit public sector buyers first.
  • Regulatory fragmentation could create confusion if the UK diverges too sharply from other jurisdictions.

The AI complication​

AI is the biggest wildcard. If Copilot becomes deeply embedded in work routines before the CMA finalizes any remedy, the market may shift again. The regulator could end up trying to solve a competition problem that is already evolving into a broader platform-power issue.
That is why speed will matter. But speed without precision would be dangerous. The CMA needs a remedy that is future-proof enough to remain relevant while not freezing innovation in place.

The risk of treating software like static infrastructure​

Business software is not a road network. It evolves continuously through updates, subscriptions and new model layers. Remedies written for a static product market may not fit a platform that can change behavior through configuration, bundling or default settings. That is one of the toughest problems regulators face in digital markets.

Looking Ahead​

The next stage will likely revolve around scope, evidence and remedy design. The question is not simply whether Microsoft is large. It is whether the company’s size and integration create barriers that the market cannot solve on its own. If the CMA answers yes, the SMS regime gives it a much sharper toolkit than ordinary competition law.
The broader strategic issue is whether the UK wants to set a precedent for regulating digital ecosystems rather than single products. That could have consequences far beyond Microsoft. It could influence how Amazon, Google, Apple and other major technology firms think about enterprise software, AI assistants and platform integration in the UK.
What happens next will depend on how the CMA frames the market definition, how Microsoft responds, and whether the regulator believes the current cloud concessions are enough to avoid more intrusive intervention. The business software investigation suggests the answer, at least for now, is no.
  • May start date: the SMS investigation is expected to begin in May.
  • Licensing rules: these are likely to be one of the first major pressure points.
  • AI integration: Copilot will probably become a central focus.
  • Cloud crossover: the regulator will watch for effects on Azure and rival clouds.
  • Interoperability: this is likely to remain a major theme across the case.
  • Public sector impact: government buyers may feel the consequences quickly.
  • Market precedent: the outcome could shape future UK digital regulation.

The bigger signal to the market​

Even before any formal designation, the message to the market is unmistakable. The CMA is no longer willing to treat Microsoft’s enterprise stack as a collection of separate commercial products. It is viewing the stack as an ecosystem with the power to affect competition across cloud, software and AI.
That is a significant shift, and it is one that rivals, customers and policymakers will be watching closely.
Microsoft’s challenge is therefore not just to defend its pricing or product design. It must persuade regulators that integration is still compatible with fair competition. If it cannot, the CMA may soon have the power to rewrite the rules of the UK enterprise software market.
The most likely outcome is not a dramatic breakup, but something more consequential in the long run: a series of conduct obligations that gradually change how Microsoft licenses, interoperates and competes in the UK. That kind of intervention is less theatrical than a blockbuster antitrust case, but it may prove far more influential in shaping the future of business software, cloud competition and AI-powered productivity.

Source: Irvine Times Microsoft to face competition watchdog probe over business software
 

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