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Microsoft Office
Microsoft Office
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Microsoft Office
DeveloperMicrosoft
Initial releaseOctober 1, 1990; 35 years ago (1990-10-01)[1]
Stable release(s)
Office 2024 (LTSC)2408 (Build 17932.20540) / 9 September 2025; 51 days ago (2025-09-09)[2]
Office 2021 (LTSC)2108 (Build 14334.20296) / 9 September 2025; 51 days ago (2025-09-09)[3]
Office 2019 (LTSC)1808 (Build 10417.20051) / 9 September 2025; 51 days ago (2025-09-09)[4]
Office 2021-24 (Retail)2509 (Build 19231.20156) / 30 September 2025; 30 days ago (2025-09-30)[2][3]
Office 2019 (Retail)2508 (Build 19127.20264) / 23 September 2025; 37 days ago (2025-09-23)[4]
Preview release(s) [±]
Written inC++ (back-end)[5]
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows, MS-DOS (discontinued),
SuccessorMicrosoft 365
StandardOffice Open XML (ISO/IEC 29500)
Available in102 languages[6]
List of languages
  • Full (43): English, Arabic, Basque, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, Galician, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay (Latin), Norwegian Bokmål, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Serbian (Latin, Serbia), Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Somali, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese
  • Partial (48): Afrikaans, Albanian, Amharic, Armenian, Assamese, Azerbaijani (Latin), Bangla (Bangladesh), Bangla (Bengali India), Belarusian, Bosnian (Latin), Dari, Filipino, Georgian, Gujarati, Icelandic, Irish, Kannada, Khmer, Kiswahili, Konkani, Kyrgyz, Luxembourgish, Macedonian, Malayalam, Maltese, Maori, Marathi, Mongolian (Cyrillic), Nepali, Norwegian Nynorsk, Odia, Persian (Farsi), Punjabi (Gurmukhi), Quechua, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian (Cyrillic, Bosnia & Herzegovina), Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia), Sindhi (Arabic), Sinhala, Tamil, Tatar (Cyrillic), Telugu, Turkmen (Latin), Urdu, Uyghur, Uzbek (Latin), Valencian, Welsh,
  • Proofing only (11): Hausa, Igbo, isiXhosa, isiZulu, Kinyarwanda, Pashto, Romansh, Sesotho sa Leboa, Setswana, Wolof, Yoruba
TypeOffice suite
LicenseTrialware, volume licensing or SaaS
Websiteoffice.com
Microsoft Office for Mobile
DeveloperMicrosoft
Initial releaseApril 19, 2000; 25 years ago (2000-04-19)
Final release
17.0 / October 2021; 4 years ago (2021-10)
Operating systemWindows 10,[7][8][9][10] Windows 10 Mobile, Windows Phone, iOS, iPadOS, Android,[11] ChromeOS[12]
PlatformSmartphones and Tablet computers[11]
TypeProductivity software
LicenseProprietary software:[11]
  • Windows 10 Mobile and Windows Phone: Built-in
  • Others: Freeware, with shareware features
Websitewww.office.com Edit this on Wikidata
Microsoft Office for Mac
DeveloperMicrosoft
Initial releaseAugust 1, 1989; 36 years ago (1989-08-01)
Stable release
Microsoft Office 2024
Written inC++ (back-end), Objective-C (API/UI)[5]
Operating systemmacOS
Classic Mac OS (discontinued)
Available in16 languages[13]
List of languages
English, Arabic, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian (Bokmål), Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Swedish
TypeOffice suite
LicenseProprietary commercial software (retail, volume licensing, SaaS)
Websitewww.office.com Edit this on Wikidata

Microsoft Office, MS Office, or simply Office, is an office suite and (formerly) a family of client software, server software, and services developed by Microsoft. The first version of the Office suite, announced by Bill Gates on August 1, 1988, at COMDEX, contained Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel, and Microsoft PowerPoint, all three of which remain core products in Office. Over time, the Office suite has grown substantially, adding programs such as OneNote and Outlook; the suite has also been made highly extensible with the use of the VBA scripting language.

The suite currently includes a word processor (Word), a spreadsheet program (Excel), a presentation program (PowerPoint), a note-taking program (OneNote), and an email client (Outlook); the Windows version also includes a database management system (Access). Microsoft Office previously offered desktop, mobile, and web applications; out of these, only the desktop suite is still maintained.

Since Office 2013, Microsoft has promoted Microsoft 365 (formerly Office 365) as the primary means of obtaining Microsoft Office: it allows the use of the software and other services on a subscription business model, and users receive feature updates to the software for the lifetime of the subscription, including new features and cloud computing integration that are not necessarily included in the "on-premises" releases of Office sold under conventional license terms. In 2017, revenue from Office 365 overtook conventional license sales.

Microsoft continues to sell the perpetually-licensed Office suite, the latest version of which is Office 2024.[14][15][16]

Components

[edit]

Core applications and services

[edit]

Windows-only programs

[edit]

Mobile apps

[edit]
  • Office Lens is an image scanner optimized for mobile devices. It captures the document (e.g. business card, paper, whiteboard) via the camera and then straightens the document portion of the image. The result can be exported to Word, OneNote, PowerPoint or Outlook, or saved in OneDrive, sent via Mail or placed in Photo Library.
  • Office Mobile is a unified Office mobile app for Android and iOS, which combines Word, Excel, and PowerPoint into a single app and introduces new capabilities as making quick notes, signing PDFs, scanning QR codes, and transferring files.[21]
  • Office Remote is an application that turns the mobile device into a remote control for desktop versions of Word, Excel and PowerPoint.

Server applications

[edit]

Web services

[edit]

Office for the web

[edit]

Office for the web was a free web version of Microsoft Office that included three web applications: Word, Excel and PowerPoint. The offering also included Outlook.com, OneNote and OneDrive; these are accessible through a unified app switcher. Users can install the on-premises version of this service, called Office Online Server, in private clouds in conjunction with SharePoint, Microsoft Exchange Server and Microsoft Lync Server.[23]

Key Information

Word, Excel, and PowerPoint for the web could natively open, edit, and save Office Open XML files (docx, xlsx, pptx) as well as OpenDocument files (odt, ods, odp). They could also open files with legacy Office formats (doc, xls, ppt), but these were converted to the newer formats once edited. Password-encrypted Office files could not be opened. Files with macros could be opened in the browser apps, but the macros could not be accessed or executed.[24][25][26] In July 2013, Word gained the ability to render PDF documents or convert them to Microsoft Word documents, although the formatting of the document may have deviated from the original.[27] In November 2013, the apps started supporting real-time co-authoring and autosaving files.[28][29]

Office for the web lacked a number of the advanced features present in the full desktop versions of Office, including the programs Access and Publisher. However, users were able to select the command "Open in desktop app"; this brought up the document in the desktop version of Office on their computer or device to utilize the advanced features there.[30][31]

The Personal edition of Office for the web was available to the general public free of charge with a Microsoft account through the Office.com website, which superseded SkyDrive (now OneDrive) and Office Live Workspace. Enterprise-managed versions were available through Office 365.[32] In February 2013, the ability to view and edit files on SkyDrive without signing in was added.[33] The service could also be installed privately in enterprise environments as a SharePoint app, or through Office Web Apps Server.[23] Microsoft also offered other web apps in the Office suite, such as the Outlook Web App (formerly Outlook Web Access),[34] Lync Web App (formerly Office Communicator Web Access),[35] Project Web App (formerly Project Web Access).[36] Additionally, Microsoft offers a service under the name of Online Doc Viewer to view Office documents on a website via Office on the web.[37]

In 2017, Office for the web was replaced by Microsoft 365; the service, including the former Word, Excel, and PowerPoint web applications, is no longer accessible.[38]

Common features

[edit]

Most versions of Microsoft Office (including Office 97 and later) use their own widget set and do not exactly match the native operating system. This is most apparent in Microsoft Office XP and 2003, where the standard menus were replaced with a colored, flat-looking, shadowed menu style.

The user interface of a particular version of Microsoft Office often heavily influences a subsequent version of Microsoft Windows. E.g.:-

  • The toolbar, colored buttons and the gray-colored 3D look of Office 4.3 were added to Windows 95.
  • The ribbon, introduced in Office 2007, has been incorporated into several programs bundled with Windows 7 and later.
  • The flat, box-like design of Office 2013 (released in 2012) was replicated in Windows 8's new UI revamp.

Users of Microsoft Office may access external data via connection-specifications saved in Office Data Connection (.odc) files.[39]

Office, on all platforms, supports editing both server files (in real time) and offline files (manually saved) in recent years. The support for editing server files (in real time) was originally introduced (in its current form) after the introduction of OneDrive (formerly SkyDrive). But, older versions of Office also have the ability to edit server files (notably Office 2007).

Both Windows and Office used service packs to update software. Office had non-cumulative service releases, which were discontinued after Office 2000 Service Release 1. Now, Windows and Office have shifted to predictable (monthly, semi-annual and annual) release schemes to update software.

Past versions of Office often contained Easter eggs. For example, Excel 97 contained a reasonably functional flight-simulator.

File formats and metadata

[edit]

Microsoft Office prior to Office 2007 used proprietary file formats based on the OLE Compound File Binary Format.[40] This forced users who share data to adopt the same software platform.[41] In 2008, Microsoft made the entire documentation for the binary Office formats freely available for download and granted any possible patents rights for use or implementations of those binary format for free under the Open Specification Promise.[42][43] Previously, Microsoft had supplied such documentation freely but only on request.[44]

Starting with Office 2007, the default file format has been a version of Office Open XML, though different from the one standardized and published by Ecma International and by ISO/IEC. Microsoft has granted patent rights to the formats technology under the Open Specification Promise[45] and has made available free downloadable converters for previous versions of Microsoft Office including Office 2003, Office XP, Office 2000[46] and Office 2004 for Mac OS X. Third-party implementations of Office Open XML exist on the Windows platform (LibreOffice, all platforms), macOS platform (iWork '08, NeoOffice, LibreOffice) and Linux (LibreOffice and OpenOffice.org 3.0). In addition, Office 2010, Service Pack 2 for Office 2007, and Office 2016 for Mac supports the OpenDocument Format (ODF) for opening and saving documents – only the old ODF 1.0 (2006 ISO/IEC standard) is supported, not the 1.2 version (2015 ISO/IEC standard).

Microsoft provides the ability to remove metadata from Office documents. This was in response to highly publicized incidents where sensitive data about a document was leaked via its metadata.[47] Metadata removal was first available in 2004, when Microsoft released a tool called Remove Hidden Data Add-in for Office 2003/XP for this purpose.[48] It was directly integrated into Office 2007 in a feature called the Document Inspector.

Extensibility

[edit]

A major feature of the Office suite is the ability for users and third-party companies to write add-ins (plug-ins) that extend the capabilities of an application by adding custom commands and specialized features. One of the new features is the Office Store.[49] Plugins and other tools can be downloaded by users.[50] Developers can make money by selling their applications in the Office Store. The revenue is divided between the developer and Microsoft where the developer gets 80% of the money.[51] Developers are able to share applications with all Office users.[51]

The app travels with the document, and it is for the developer to decide what the recipient will see when they open it. The recipient will either have the option to download the app from the Office Store for free, start a free trial or be directed to payment.[51] With Office's cloud abilities, IT departments can create a set of apps for their business employees in order to increase their productivity.[52] When employees go to the Office Store, they'll see their company's apps under My Organization. The apps that employees have personally downloaded will appear under My Apps.[51] Developers can use web technologies like HTML5, XML, CSS3, JavaScript, and APIs for building the apps.[53] An application for Office is a webpage that is hosted inside an Office client application. Users can use apps to amplify the functionality of a document, email message, meeting request, or appointment. Apps can run in multiple environments and by multiple clients, including rich Office desktop clients, Office Web Apps, mobile browsers, and also on-premises and in the cloud.[53] The type of add-ins supported differ by Office versions:

Password protection

[edit]

Microsoft Office has a security feature that allows users to encrypt Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access, Skype Business) documents with a user-provided password. The password can contain up to 255 characters and uses AES 128-bit advanced encryption by default.[57] Passwords can also be used to restrict modification of the entire document, worksheet or presentation. Due to lack of document encryption, though, these passwords can be removed using a third-party cracking software.[58]

Support policies

[edit]

Approach

[edit]

All versions of Microsoft Office products from Office 2000 to Office 2016 are eligible for ten years of support following their release, during which Microsoft releases security updates for the product version and provides paid technical support. The ten-year period is divided into two five-year phases: The mainstream phase and the extended phase. During the mainstream phase, Microsoft may provide limited complimentary technical support and release non-security updates or change the design of the product. During the extended phase, said services stop.[59] Office 2019 only receives 5 years of mainstream and 2 years of extended support and Office 2021 only gets 5 years of mainstream support.[60]

Timelines of support

[edit]
Timeline of Microsoft Office for Windows
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
  •      (Spent) standard support
  •      (Remaining) standard support
  •      (Spent) extended support
  •      (Remaining) extended support
Timeline of Microsoft Office for Mac
Office v. X
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
  •      (Spent) standard support
  •      (Remaining) standard support
  •      (Spent) extended support
  •      (Remaining) extended support

Platforms

[edit]

Microsoft supports Office for the Windows and macOS platforms, as well as mobile versions for Windows Phone, Android and iOS platforms. Beginning with Mac Office 4.2, the macOS and Windows versions of Office share the same file format, and are interoperable. Visual Basic for Applications support was dropped in Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac,[61] then reintroduced in Office for Mac 2011.[62]

Microsoft tried in the mid-1990s to port Office to RISC processors such as NEC/MIPS and IBM/PowerPC, but they met problems such as memory access being hampered by data structure alignment requirements. Microsoft Word 97 and Excel 97, however, did ship for the DEC Alpha platform. Difficulties in porting Office may have been a factor in discontinuing Windows NT on non-Intel platforms.[63]

Pricing model and editions

[edit]

The Microsoft Office applications and suites are sold via retail channels, and volume licensing for larger organizations (also including the "Home Use Program". allowing users at participating organizations to buy low-cost licenses for use on their personal devices as part of their employer's volume license agreement).[64]

In 2010, Microsoft introduced a software as a service platform known as Office 365, to provide cloud-hosted versions of Office's server software, including Exchange e-mail and SharePoint, on a subscription basis (competing in particular with Google Apps).[65][66] Following the release of Office 2013, Microsoft began to offer Office 365 plans for the consumer market, with access to Microsoft Office software on multiple devices with free feature updates over the life of the subscription, as well as other services such as OneDrive storage.[67][68]

Microsoft has since promoted Office 365 as the primary means of purchasing Microsoft Office. Although there are still "on-premises" releases roughly every three years, Microsoft marketing emphasizes that they do not receive new features or access to new cloud-based services as they are released unlike Office 365, as well as other benefits for consumer and business markets.[69][70][71] Office 365 revenue overtook traditional license sales for Office in 2017.[72]

Editions

[edit]

Microsoft Office is available in several editions, which regroup a given number of applications for a specific price. Primarily, Microsoft sells Office as Microsoft 365. The editions are as follows:

  • Microsoft 365 Personal
  • Microsoft 365 Family
  • Microsoft 365 Business Basic
  • Microsoft 365 Business Standard
  • Microsoft 365 Business Premium
  • Microsoft 365 apps for business
  • Microsoft 365 apps for enterprise
  • Office 365 E1, E3, E5
  • Office 365 A1, A3, A5 (for education)
  • Office 365 G1, G3, G5 (for government)
  • Microsoft 365 F1, F3, Office 365 F3 (for frontline)

Microsoft sells Office for a one-time purchase as Home & Student and Home & Business, however, these editions do not receive major updates.

Education pricing

[edit]

Post-secondary students may obtain the university edition of Microsoft Office 365 subscription. It is limited to one user and two devices, plus the subscription price is valid for four years instead of just one. Apart from this, the university edition is identical in features to the Home Premium version. This marks the first time Microsoft does not offer physical or permanent software at academic pricing, in contrast to the university versions of Office 2010 and Office 2011. In addition, students eligible for DreamSpark program may receive select standalone Microsoft Office apps free of charge.

Discontinued applications and features

[edit]
  • Binder was an application that can incorporate several documents into one file and was originally designed as a container system for storing related documents in a single file. The complexity of use and learning curve led to little usage, and it was discontinued after Office XP.
  • Bookshelf was a reference collection introduced in 1987 as part of Microsoft's extensive work in promoting CD-ROM technology as a distribution medium for electronic publishing.
  • Data Analyzer was a business intelligence program for graphical visualization of data and its analysis.
  • Docs.com was a public document sharing service where Office users can upload and share Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Sway and PDF files for the whole world to discover and use.
  • Entourage was an Outlook counterpart on macOS, Microsoft discontinued it in favor of extending the Outlook brand name.
  • FrontPage was a WYSIWYG HTML editor and website administration tool for Windows. It was branded as part of the Microsoft Office suite from 1997 to 2003. FrontPage was discontinued in December 2006 and replaced by Microsoft SharePoint Designer and Microsoft Expression Web.
  • InfoPath was a Windows application for designing and distributing rich XML-based forms. The last version was included in Office 2013.[73]
  • InterConnect was a business-relationship database available only in Japan.
  • Internet Explorer was a graphical web browser and one of the main participants of the first browser war. It was included in Office until XP when it was removed. It was replaced with Edge.
  • Mail was a mail client (in old versions of Office, later replaced by Microsoft Schedule Plus and subsequently Microsoft Outlook).
  • Accounting (formerly Small Business Accounting) was an accounting software application from Microsoft targeted towards small businesses that had between 1 and 25 employees.
  • Assistant (included since Office 97 on Windows and Office 98 on Mac as a part of Agent technology) was a system that uses animated characters to offer context-sensitive suggestions to users and access to the help system. The Assistant is often dubbed "Clippy" or "Clippit", due to its default to a paper clip character, coded as CLIPPIT.ACS. The latest versions that include the Office Assistant were Office 2003 (Windows) and Office 2004 (Mac).
  • Document Image Writer was a virtual printer that takes documents from Microsoft Office or any other application and prints them, or stores them in an image file as TIFF or Microsoft Document Imaging Format format. It was discontinued with Office 2010.[74]
  • Document Imaging was an application that supports editing scanned documents. Discontinued Office 2010.[74]
  • Document Scanning was a scanning and OCR application. Discontinued Office 2010.[74]
  • Picture Manager was a basic photo management software (similar to Google's Picasa or Adobe's Photoshop Elements), that replaced Microsoft Photo Editor.
  • PhotoDraw was a graphics program that was first released as part of the Office 2000 Premium Edition. A later version for Windows XP compatibility was released, known as PhotoDraw 2000 Version 2. Microsoft discontinued the program in 2001.
  • Photo Editor was photo-editing or raster-graphics software in older Office versions up to Office XP. It was supplemented by Microsoft PhotoDraw in Office 2000 Premium edition.
  • Schedule Plus (also shown as Schedule+) was released with Office 95. It featured a planner, to-do list, and contact information. Its functions were incorporated into Microsoft Outlook.
  • SharePoint Designer was a WYSIWYG HTML editor and website administration tool. Microsoft attempted to turn it into a specialized HTML editor for SharePoint sites, but failed on this project and wanted to discontinue it.
  • SharePoint Workspace (formerly Groove) was a proprietary peer-to-peer document collaboration software designed for teams with members who are regularly offline or who do not share the same network security clearance.
  • Skype for Business was an integrated communications client for conferences and meetings in real-time; it is the only Microsoft Office desktop app that is neither useful without a proper network infrastructure nor has the "Microsoft" prefix in its name.
  • Streets & Trips (known in other countries as Microsoft AutoRoute) is a discontinued mapping program developed and distributed by Microsoft.
  • Unbind is a program that can extract the contents of a Binder file. Unbind can be installed from the Office XP CD-ROM.
  • Virtual PC was included with Microsoft Office Professional Edition 2004 for Mac. Microsoft discontinued support for Virtual PC on the Mac in 2006 owing to new Macs possessing the same Intel architecture as Windows PCs.[75] It emulated a standard PC and its hardware.
  • Vizact was a program that "activated" documents using HTML, adding effects such as animation. It allows users to create dynamic documents for the Web. The development has ended due to unpopularity.

Discontinued server applications

[edit]
  • Forms lets users use any browser to access and fill InfoPath forms. Office Forms Server is a standalone server installation of InfoPath Forms Services.
  • Groove was centrally managing all deployments of Microsoft Office Groove in the enterprise.
  • Project Portfolio allows creation of a project portfolio, including workflows, which is hosted centrally.
  • PerformancePoint allows customers to monitor, analyze, and plan their business.

Discontinued web services

[edit]
  • Office Live
    • Office Live Small Business had web hosting services and online collaboration tools for small businesses.
    • Office Live Workspace had online storage and collaboration service for documents, which was superseded by Office on the web.
  • Office Live Meeting was a web conferencing service.

Criticism

[edit]

Data formats

[edit]

Microsoft Office has been criticized in the past for using proprietary file formats rather than open standards, which forces users who share data into adopting the same software platform.[76] However, on February 15, 2008, Microsoft made the entire documentation for the binary Office formats freely available under the Open Specification Promise.[77] Also, Office Open XML, the document format for the latest versions of Office for Windows and Mac, has been standardized under both Ecma International and ISO. Ecma International has published the Office Open XML specification free of copyrights and Microsoft has granted patent rights to the formats technology under the Open Specification Promise[78] and has made available free downloadable converters for previous versions of Microsoft Office including Office 2003, Office XP, Office 2000 and Office 2004 for the Mac. Third-party implementations of Office Open XML exist on the Mac platform (iWork 08) and Linux (OpenOffice.org 2.3 – Novell Edition only).

Unicode and bi-directional texts

[edit]

Another point of criticism Microsoft Office has faced was the lack of support in its Mac versions for Unicode and Bidirectional text languages, notably Arabic and Hebrew. This issue, which had existed since the first release in 1989, was addressed in the 2016 version.[79][80]

Privacy

[edit]

On November 13, 2018, a report initiated by the Government of the Netherlands concluded that Microsoft Office 2016 and Office 365 do not comply with GDPR, the European law which regulates data protection and privacy for all citizens in and outside the EU and EFTA region.[81] The investigation was initiated by the observation that Microsoft does not reveal or share publicly any data collected about users of its software. In addition, the company does not provide users of its (Office) software an option to turn off diagnostic and telemetry data sent back to the company. Researchers found that most of the data that the Microsoft software collects and "sends home" is diagnostics. Researchers also observed that Microsoft "seemingly tried to make the system GDPR compliant by storing Office documents on servers based in the EU". However, they discovered the software packages collected additional data that contained private user information, some of which was stored on servers located in the US.[82] The Netherlands Ministry of Justice hired Privacy Company to probe and evaluate the use of Microsoft Office products in the public sector.[83] "Microsoft systematically collects data on a large scale about the individual use of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook. Covertly, without informing people", researchers of the Privacy Company stated in their blog post. "Microsoft does not offer any choice with regard to the amount of data, or possibility to switch off the collection, or ability to see what data are collected, because the data stream is encoded."[84]

The researchers commented that there is no need for Microsoft to store information such as IPs and email addresses, which are collected automatically by the software. "Microsoft should not store these transient, functional data, unless the retention is strictly necessary, for example, for security purposes", the researchers conclude in the final report by the Netherlands Ministry of Justice.[85]

As a result of this in-depth study and its conclusions, the Netherlands regulatory body concluded that Microsoft has violated GDPR "on many counts" including "lack of transparency and purpose limitation, and the lack of a legal ground for the processing."[86] Microsoft has provided the Dutch authorities with an "improvement plan" that should satisfy Dutch regulators that it "would end all violations". The Dutch regulatory body is monitoring the situation and states that "If progress is deemed insufficient or if the improvements offered are unsatisfactory, SLM Microsoft Rijk will reconsider its position and may ask the Dutch Data Protection Authority to carry out a prior consultation and to impose enforcement measures."[87] When asked for a response by an IT professional publication, a Microsoft spokesperson stated: "We are committed to our customers’ privacy, putting them in control of their data and ensuring that Office ProPlus and other Microsoft products and services comply with GDPR and other applicable laws. We appreciate the opportunity to discuss our diagnostic data handling practices in Office ProPlus with the Dutch Ministry of Justice and look forward to a successful resolution of any concerns."[83] The user privacy data issue affects ProPlus subscriptions of Microsoft Office 2016 and Microsoft Office 365, including the online version of Microsoft Office 365.[88]

History of releases

[edit]
Legend:
Unsupported
Supported
Latest version
Future version
Windows
Office version Version number Minimum operating system Office support end date
3.x Various Windows 3.0[89] Unsupported: September 30, 1998[90]
4.x 6.0 3.1 Unsupported: November 1, 2000[91]
95 7.0 NT 3.51 Unsupported: December 31, 2001[92]
97 8.0 NT 3.51 SP5 Unsupported: January 16, 2004[93]
2000 9.0 95[94] Unsupported: July 14, 2009
XP 10.0 NT 4.0 SP6a[95][96] Unsupported: July 12, 2011[97]
2003 11.0 2000 SP3[98] Unsupported: April 8, 2014
2007 12.0 XP SP2[99] Unsupported: October 10, 2017[100]
2010 14.0 XP SP3[101] Unsupported: October 13, 2020
2013 15.0 7[102] Unsupported: April 11, 2023[103]
2016 16.0[104][105] 7 SP1[106] Unsupported: October 14, 2025[107][108]
2019 10 v1809[109]
2021 Supported: October 13, 2026[110]
2024 Latest version: October 9, 2029[14][111]
Mac
Office version Version number Minimum operating system Office support end date
3.0 6.0 Classic
Mac OS
? Unsupported: June 1, 2001[90]
4.2 7.0 7.0 (68K) Unsupported: December 31, 1996[91]
98 Macintosh Edition 8.0 7.5 (PPC) Unsupported: June 30, 2003[112]
2001 9.0 8.1 (PPC) Unsupported: December 31, 2005[113]
v. X 10.0 macOS 10.1 Unsupported: January 9, 2007[114]
2004 for Mac 11.0 10.2 Unsupported: January 10, 2012[115]
2008 for Mac 12.0 10.4 (PPC)[116] Unsupported: April 9, 2013[117]
2011 for Mac 14.0 10.5 (Intel)[116] Unsupported: October 10, 2017[118]
2016 15.0 – 16.16.x 10.10[116] Unsupported: October 13, 2020[119]
2019 16.17 – 16.52 10.12 Unsupported: October 10, 2023[120]
2021 16.53+ 10.15 Supported: October 13, 2026[110]
2024 TBA 12 Latest version: October 9, 2029[14][111]
iOS & Android
Office version Version number Minimum operating system
Android[7][8][9]
for Word, Excel, PowerPoint
16.0 Android Pie (9.0)
iOS[10][121][122]
for Word, Excel, PowerPoint
2.80 iOS 16
iOS (Beta Channel)
for Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Office Mobile
2.80 iOS 16 with TestFlight installed.
OneNote
for iOS
16.80 iOS 16
OneNote (Beta Channel)
for iOS
16.80 iOS 16 with TestFlight installed.

Version history

[edit]

Windows versions

[edit]

Microsoft Office for Windows

[edit]

Microsoft Office for Windows[123] started in October 1990 as a bundle of three applications designed for Microsoft Windows 3.0: Microsoft Word for Windows 1.1, Microsoft Excel for Windows 2.0, and Microsoft PowerPoint for Windows 2.0.[124]

Microsoft Office for Windows 1.5 updated the suite with Microsoft Excel 3.0.[125]

Version 1.6[126] added Microsoft Mail for PC Networks 2.1 to the bundle.[127]

Microsoft Office 3.0

[edit]

Microsoft Office 3.0,[128] also called Microsoft Office 92, was released on August 30, 1992, and[129] contained Word 2.0, Excel 4.0, PowerPoint 3.0 and Mail 3.0. It was the first version of Office also released on CD-ROM.[130] In 1993, Microsoft Office Professional[131] was released, which added Microsoft Access 1.1.[132]

Microsoft Office 4.x

[edit]

Microsoft Office 4.0 was released containing Word 6.0, Excel 4.0a, PowerPoint 3.0 and Mail in 1993.[133] Word's version number jumped from 2.0 to 6.0 so that it would have the same version number as the MS-DOS and Macintosh versions (Excel and PowerPoint were already numbered the same as the Macintosh versions).

Microsoft Office 4.2 for Windows NT was released in 1994 for i386, Alpha,[134] MIPS and PowerPC[135] architectures, containing Word 6.0 and Excel 5.0 (both 32-bit),[136] PowerPoint 4.0 (16-bit), and Microsoft Office Manager 4.2 (the precursor to the Office Shortcut Bar)).

Microsoft Office 95

[edit]

Microsoft Office 95 was released on August 24, 1995. Software version numbers were altered again to create parity across the suite – every program was called version 7.0 meaning all but Word missed out versions. Office 95 included new components to the suite such as Schedule+ and Binder. Office for Windows 95 was designed as a fully 32-bit version to match Windows 95 although some apps not bundled as part of the suite at that time - Publisher for Windows 95 and Project 95 had some 16-bit components even though their main program executable was 32-bit.

Office 95 was available in two versions, Office 95 Standard and Office 95 Professional. The standard version consisted of Word 7.0, Excel 7.0, PowerPoint 7.0, and Schedule+ 7.0. The professional edition contained all of the items in the standard version plus Access 7.0. If the professional version was purchased in CD-ROM form, it also included Bookshelf.

The logo used in Office 95 returns in Office 97, 2000 and XP. Microsoft Office 98 Macintosh Edition also uses a similar logo.

Microsoft Office 97

[edit]

Microsoft Office 97 (Office 8.0) included hundreds of new features and improvements, such as introducing command bars, a paradigm in which menus and toolbars were made more similar in capability and visual design. Office 97 also featured Natural Language Systems and grammar checking. Office 97 featured new components to the suite including FrontPage 97, Expedia Streets 98 (in Small Business Edition), and Internet Explorer 3.0 & 4.0.

Office 97 was the first version of Office to include the Office Assistant. In Brazil, it was also the first version to introduce the Registration Wizard, a precursor to Microsoft Product Activation. With this release, the accompanying apps, Project 98 and Publisher 98 also transitioned to fully 32-bit versions. Exchange Server, a mail server and calendaring server developed by Microsoft, is the server for Outlook after discontinuing Exchange Client.

Microsoft Office 2000

[edit]

Microsoft Office 2000 (Office 9.0) introduced adaptive menus, where little-used options were hidden from the user. It also introduced a new security feature, built around digital signatures, to diminish the threat of macro viruses. The Microsoft Script Editor, an optional tool that can edit script code, was also introduced in Office 2000.[137] Office 2000 automatically trusts macros (written in VBA 6) that were digitally signed from authors who have been previously designated as trusted. Office 2000 also introduces PhotoDraw, a raster and vector imaging program, as well as Web Components, Visio, and Vizact.

The Registration Wizard, a precursor to Microsoft Product Activation, remained in Brazil and was also extended to Australia and New Zealand, though not for volume-licensed editions. Academic software in the United States and Canada also featured the Registration Wizard.

Microsoft Office XP

[edit]

Microsoft Office XP (Office 10.0 or Office 2002) was released in conjunction with Windows XP, and was a major upgrade with numerous enhancements and changes over Office 2000. Office XP introduced the Safe Mode feature, which allows applications such as Outlook to boot when it might otherwise fail by bypassing a corrupted registry or a faulty add-in. Smart tag is a technology introduced with Office XP in Word and Excel and discontinued in Office 2010.

Office XP also introduces new components including Document Imaging, Document Scanning, Clip Organizer, MapPoint, and Data Analyzer. Binder was replaced by Unbind, a program that can extract the contents of a Binder file. Unbind can be installed from the Office XP CD-ROM.

Office XP includes integrated voice command and text dictation capabilities, as well as handwriting recognition. It was the first version to require Microsoft Product Activation worldwide and in all editions as an anti-piracy measure, which attracted widespread controversy.[138] Product Activation remained absent from Office for Mac releases until it was introduced in Office 2011 for Mac.

Microsoft Office 2003

[edit]

Microsoft Office 2003 (Office 11.0) was released in 2003. It featured a new logo. Two new applications made their debut in Office 2003: Microsoft InfoPath and OneNote. It is the first version to use new, more colorful icons. Outlook 2003 provides improved functionality in many areas, including Kerberos authentication, RPC over HTTP, Cached Exchange Mode, and an improved junk mail filter.

Office 2003 introduces three new programs to the Office product lineup: InfoPath, a program for designing, filling, and submitting electronic structured data forms; OneNote, a note-taking program for creating and organizing diagrams, graphics, handwritten notes, recorded audio, and text; and the Picture Manager graphics software which can open, manage, and share digital images.

SharePoint, a web collaboration platform codenamed as Office Server, has integration and compatibility with Office 2003 and so on.[139]

Microsoft Office 2007

[edit]

Microsoft Office 2007 (Office 12.0) was released in 2007. Office 2007's new features include a new graphical user interface called the Fluent User Interface,[140] replacing the menus and toolbars that have been the cornerstone of Office since its inception with a tabbed toolbar, known as the Ribbon; new XML-based file formats called Office Open XML; and the inclusion of Groove, a collaborative software application.[141]

While Microsoft removed Data Analyzer, FrontPage, Vizact, and Schedule+ from Office 2007; they also added Communicator, Groove, SharePoint Designer, and Office Customization Tool (OCT) to the suite.

Microsoft Office 2010

[edit]

Microsoft Office 2010 (Office 14.0, Microsoft skipped 13.0 due to fear of 13[142]) was finalized on April 15, 2010, and made available to consumers on June 15, 2010.[143][144] The main features of Office 2010 include the backstage file menu, new collaboration tools, a customizable ribbon, protected view and a navigation panel. Office Communicator, an instant messaging and videotelephony application, was renamed into Lync 2010.

This is the first version to ship in 32-bit and 64-bit variants. Microsoft Office 2010 featured a new logo, which resembled the 2007 logo, except in gold, and with a modification in shape.[145] Microsoft released Service Pack 1 for Office 2010 on June 28, 2011[146] and Service Pack 2 on July 16, 2013.[147] Office Online was first released online along with SkyDrive, an online storing service.

Microsoft Office 2013

[edit]

A technical preview of Microsoft Office 2013 (Build 15.0.3612.1010) was released on January 30, 2012, and a Customer Preview version was made available to consumers on July 16, 2012.[148] It sports a revamped application interface; the interface is based on Metro, the interface of Windows Phone and Windows 8. Microsoft Outlook has received the most pronounced changes so far; for example, the Metro interface provides a new visualization for scheduled tasks. PowerPoint includes more templates and transition effects, and OneNote includes a new splash screen.[149]

On May 16, 2011, new images of Office 15 were revealed, showing Excel with a tool for filtering data in a timeline, the ability to convert Roman numerals to Arabic numerals, and the integration of advanced trigonometric functions. In Word, the capability of inserting video and audio online as well as the broadcasting of documents on the Web were implemented.[150] Microsoft has promised support for Office Open XML Strict starting with version 15, a format Microsoft has submitted to the ISO for interoperability with other office suites, and to aid adoption in the public sector.[151] This version can read and write ODF 1.2 (Windows only).[152]

On October 24, 2012, Office 2013 Professional Plus was released to manufacturing and was made available to TechNet and MSDN subscribers for download.[153] On November 15, 2012, the 60-day trial version was released for public download.[154] Office 2013 was released to general availability on January 29, 2013.[155] Service Pack 1 for Office 2013 was released on February 25, 2014.[156] Some applications were completely removed from the entire suite including SharePoint Workspace, Clip Organizer, and Office Picture Manager.

Microsoft Office 2016

[edit]

On January 22, 2015, the Microsoft Office blog announced that the next version of the suite for Windows desktop, Office 2016, was in development. On May 4, 2015, a public preview of Microsoft Office 2016 was released.[157][158][159] Office 2016 was released for Mac OS X on July 9, 2015[160] and for Windows on September 22, 2015.[161]

Users who had the Professional Plus 2016 subscription have the new Skype for Business app. Microsoft Teams, a team collaboration program meant to rival Slack, was released as a separate product for business and enterprise users.

Microsoft Office 2019

[edit]

On September 26, 2017, Microsoft announced that the next version of the suite for Windows desktop, Office 2019, was in development. On April 27, 2018, Microsoft released Office 2019 Commercial Preview for Windows 10.[162] It was released to general availability for Windows 10 and for macOS on September 24, 2018.[163]

Microsoft Office 2021

[edit]

On February 18, 2021, Microsoft announced that the next version of the suite for Windows desktop, Office 2021, was in development.[164] This new version will be supported for five years and was released on October 5, 2021.[165]

Microsoft Office 2024

[edit]

On November 14, 2023, Microsoft announced Office 2024, expected to be rolled out in the second half of 2024. The announcement was a reversal of their decision to discontinue the Office brand in January 2023. Like its predecessors, Office 2024 can be purchased under a perpetual license for the desktop.[14] Office 2024 was released for customers under an LTSC contract on September 16, 2024.[16] The consumer version of Office 2024 released on October 1, 2024.[166] Like its predecessors, Office 2024 is also available in a macOS variant.[167]

Mac versions

[edit]

Prior to packaging its various office-type Mac OS software applications into Office, Microsoft released Mac versions of Word 1.0 in 1984, the first year of the Macintosh computer; Excel 1.0 in 1985; and PowerPoint 1.0 in 1987.[168] Microsoft does not include its Access database application in Office for Mac.

Microsoft has noted that some features are added to Office for Mac before they appear in Windows versions, such as Office for Mac 2001's Office Project Gallery and PowerPoint Movie feature, which allows users to save presentations as QuickTime movies.[169][170] However, Microsoft Office for Mac has been long criticized for its lack of support of Unicode and for its lack of support for right-to-left languages, notably Arabic, Hebrew and Persian.[171][172]

Early Office for Mac releases (1989–1994)

[edit]

Microsoft Office for Mac was introduced for Mac OS in 1989, before Office was released for Windows.[173] It included Word 4.0, Excel 2.2, PowerPoint 2.01, and Mail 1.37.[174] It was originally a limited-time promotion but later became a regular product. With the release of Office on CD-ROM later that year, Microsoft became the first major Mac publisher to put its applications on CD-ROM.[175]

Microsoft Office 1.5 for Mac was released in 1991 and included the updated Excel 3.0, the first application to support Apple's System 7 operating system.[168]

Microsoft Office 3.0 for Mac was released in 1992 and included Word 5.0, Excel 4.0, PowerPoint 3.0 and Mail Client. Excel 4.0 was the first application to support new AppleScript.[168]

Microsoft Office 4.2 for Mac was released in 1994. (Version 4.0 was skipped to synchronize version numbers with Office for Windows) Version 4.2 included Word 6.0, Excel 5.0, PowerPoint 4.0 and Mail 3.2.[176] It was the first Office suite for Power Macintosh.[168] Its user interface was identical to Office 4.2 for Windows[177] leading many customers to comment that it wasn't Mac-like enough.[169] The final release for Mac 68K was Office 4.2.1, which updated Word to version 6.0.1, somewhat improving performance.

Microsoft Office 98 Macintosh Edition

[edit]

Microsoft Office 98 Macintosh Edition was unveiled at MacWorld Expo/San Francisco in 1998. It introduced the Internet Explorer 4.0 web browser and Outlook Express, an Internet e-mail client and usenet newsgroup reader.[178] Office 98 was re-engineered by Microsoft's Macintosh Business Unit to satisfy customers' desire for software they felt was more Mac-like.[169] It included drag–and-drop installation, self-repairing applications and Quick Thesaurus, before such features were available in Office for Windows. It also was the first version to support QuickTime movies.[169]

Microsoft Office 2001 and v. X

[edit]
Microsoft Office v. X box art

Microsoft Office 2001 was launched in 2000 as the last Office suite for the classic Mac OS. It required a PowerPC processor. This version introduced Entourage, an e-mail client that included information management tools such as a calendar, an address book, task lists and notes.[170] Microsoft Office v. X was released in 2001 and was the first version of Microsoft Office for Mac OS X.[179] Support for Office v. X ended on January 9, 2007, after the release of the final update, 10.1.9[180] Office v.X includes Word X, Excel X, PowerPoint X, Entourage X, MSN Messenger for Mac and Windows Media Player 9 for Mac; it was the last version of Office for Mac to include Internet Explorer for Mac.[181]

Office 2004

[edit]

Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac was released on May 11, 2004.[182] It includes Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Entourage and Virtual PC. It is the final version of Office to be built exclusively for PowerPC and to officially support G3 processors, as its sequel lists a G4, G5, or Intel processor as a requirement. It was notable for supporting Visual Basic for Applications (VBA), which is unavailable in Office 2008. This led Microsoft to extend support for Office 2004 from October 13, 2009, to January 10, 2012. VBA functionality was reintroduced in Office 2011, which is only compatible with Intel processors.

Office 2008

[edit]

Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac was released on January 15, 2008. It was the only Office for Mac suite to be compiled as a universal binary, being the first to feature native Intel support and the last to feature PowerPC support for G4 and G5 processors, although the suite is unofficially compatible with G3 processors. New features include native Office Open XML file format support, which debuted in Office 2007 for Windows,[168] and stronger Microsoft Office password protection employing AES-128 and SHA-1. Benchmarks suggested that compared to its predecessor, Office 2008 ran at similar speeds on Intel machines and slower speeds on PowerPC machines.[183] Office 2008 also lacked Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) support, leaving it with only 15 months of additional mainstream support compared to its predecessor. Nevertheless, five months after it was released, Microsoft said that Office 2008 was "selling faster than any previous version of Office for Mac in the past 19 years" and affirmed "its commitment to future products for the Mac."[184]

Office 2011

[edit]

Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 was released on October 26, 2010,.[62] It is the first version of Office for Mac to be compiled exclusively for Intel processors, dropping support for the PowerPC architecture. It features an OS X version of Outlook to replace the Entourage email client. This version of Outlook is intended to make the OS X version of Office work better with Microsoft's Exchange server and with those using Office for Windows.[185] Office 2011 includes a Mac-based Ribbon similar to Office for Windows.

OneNote and Outlook release (2014)

[edit]

Microsoft OneNote for Mac was released on March 17, 2014. It marks the company's first release of the note-taking software on the Mac. It is available as a free download to all users of the Mac App Store in OS X Mavericks.[186]

Microsoft Outlook 2016 for Mac debuted on October 31, 2014. It requires a paid Office 365 subscription, meaning that traditional Office 2011 retail or volume licenses cannot activate this version of Outlook. On that day, Microsoft confirmed that it would release the next version of Office for Mac in late 2015.[187]

Despite dropping support for older versions of OS X and only keeping support for 64-bit-only versions of OS X, these versions of OneNote and Outlook are 32-bit applications like their predecessors.

Office 2016

[edit]

The first Preview version of Microsoft Office 2016 for Mac was released on March 5, 2015.[188] On July 9, 2015, Microsoft released the final version of Microsoft Office 2016 for Mac which includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and OneNote. It was immediately made available for Office 365 subscribers with either a Home, Personal, Business, Business Premium, E3 or ProPlus subscription. A non–Office 365 edition of Office 2016 was made available as a one-time purchase option on September 22, 2015.[161]

Office 2019

[edit]

Office 2021

[edit]

Office 2024

[edit]

Microsoft Office 2024 (Fourth perpetual release of Office 16) for the Microsoft Windows and MacOS was released on October 1, 2024.[189]

Mobile versions

[edit]
Office Hub on Windows Phone 8 and 8.1

Office Mobile for iPhone was released on June 14, 2013, in the United States.[190] Support for 135 markets and 27 languages was rolled out over a few days.[191] It requires iOS 8 or later.[192] Although the app also works on iPad devices, excluding the first generation, it is designed for a small screen.[190] Office Mobile was released for Android phones on July 31, 2013, in the United States. Support for 117 markets and 33 languages was added gradually over several weeks.[193] It is supported on Android 4.0 and later.[194]

Office Mobile is or was also available, though no longer supported, on Windows Mobile, Windows Phone and Symbian. Windows RT devices (such as Microsoft Surface) were bundled with "Office RT", a port of the PC version of Office 2013 to ARM architecture. The applications contain most of the functionality available in their versions for Intel-compatible PCs, but some features have been removed.[195][196]

Early Office Mobile releases

[edit]

Originally called Office Mobile which was shipped initially as "Pocket Office", was released by Microsoft with the Windows CE 1.0 operating system in 1996. This release was specifically for the Handheld PC hardware platform, as Windows Mobile Smartphone and Pocket PC hardware specifications had not yet been released. It consisted of Pocket Word and Pocket Excel; PowerPoint, Access, and Outlook were added later. With steady updates throughout subsequent releases of Windows Mobile, Office Mobile was rebranded as its current name after the release of the Windows Mobile 5.0 operating system. This release of Office Mobile also included PowerPoint Mobile for the first time.[197] Accompanying the release of Microsoft OneNote 2007, a new optional addition to the Office Mobile line of programs was released as OneNote Mobile.[198] With the release of Windows Mobile 6 Standard, Office Mobile became available for the Smartphone hardware platform, but unlike Office Mobile for the Professional and Classic versions of Windows Mobile, creation of new documents is not an added feature.[199] A popular workaround is to create a new blank document in a desktop version of Office, synchronize it to the device, and then edit and save on the Windows Mobile device.

In June 2007, Microsoft announced a new version of the office suite, Office Mobile 2007. It became available as "Office Mobile 6.1" on September 26, 2007, as a free upgrade download to current Windows Mobile 5.0 and 6 users. However, "Office Mobile 6.1 Upgrade" is not compatible with Windows Mobile 5.0 powered devices running builds earlier than 14847. It is a pre-installed feature in subsequent releases of Windows Mobile 6 devices.[200] Office Mobile 6.1 is compatible with the Office Open XML specification like its desktop counterpart.[200]

On August 12, 2009, it was announced that Office Mobile would also be released for the Symbian platform as a joint agreement between Microsoft and Nokia.[201][202] It was the first time Microsoft would develop Office mobile applications for another smartphone platform.[203] The first application to appear on Nokia Eseries smartphones was Microsoft Office Communicator. In February 2012, Microsoft released OneNote, Lync 2010, Document Connection and PowerPoint Broadcast for Symbian.[204] In April, Word Mobile, PowerPoint Mobile and Excel Mobile joined the Office Suite.[205]

On October 21, 2010, Microsoft debuted Office Mobile 2010 with the release of Windows Phone 7. In Windows Phone, users can access and edit documents directly off of their SkyDrive or Office 365 accounts in a dedicated Office hub. The Office Hub, which is preinstalled into the operating system, contains Word, PowerPoint and Excel. The operating system also includes OneNote, although not as a part of the Office Hub. Lync is not included, but can be downloaded as standalone app from the Windows Phone Store free of charge.

In October 2012, Microsoft released a new version of Microsoft Office Mobile for Windows Phone 8 and Windows Phone 7.8.

Office for Android, iOS and Windows 10 Mobile

[edit]

Office Mobile was released for iPhone on June 14, 2013, and for Android phones on July 31, 2013.

In March 2014, Microsoft released Office Lens, a scanner app that enhances photos. Photos are then attached to an Office document. Office Lens is an app in the Windows Phone store, as well as built into the camera functionality in the OneNote apps for iOS and Windows 8.[206]

Word on the iPhone

On March 27, 2014, Microsoft launched Office for iPad, the first dedicated version of Office for tablet computers. In addition, Microsoft made the Android and iOS versions of Office Mobile free for 'home use' on phones, although the company still requires an Office 365 subscription for using Office Mobile for business use.[207][208][209][210][211] On November 6, 2014, Office was subsequently made free for personal use on the iPad in addition to phones. As part of this announcement, Microsoft also split up its single "Office suite" app on iPhones into separate, standalone apps for Word, Excel and PowerPoint, released a revamped version of Office Mobile for iPhone, added direct integration with Dropbox, and previewed future versions of Office for other platforms.[212][213]

Office for Android tablets was released on January 29, 2015,[214] following a successful two-month preview period.[215] These apps allow users to edit and create documents for free on devices with screen sizes of 10.1 inches or less, though as with the iPad versions, an Office 365 subscription is required to unlock premium features and for commercial use of the apps. Tablets with screen sizes larger than 10.1 inches are also supported, but, as was originally the case with the iPad version, are restricted to viewing documents only unless a valid Office 365 subscription is used to enable editing and document creation.

On January 21, 2015, during the "Windows 10: The Next Chapter" press event, Microsoft unveiled Office for Windows 10, Windows Runtime ports of the Android and iOS versions of the Office Mobile suite. Optimized for smartphones and tablets, they are universal apps that can run on both Windows and Windows for phones, and share similar underlying code. A simplified version of Outlook was also added to the suite. They will be bundled with Windows 10 mobile devices, and available from the Windows Store for the PC version of Windows 10.[158][157] Although the preview versions were free for most editing, the release versions will require an Office 365 subscription on larger tablets (screen size larger than 10.1 inches) and desktops for editing, as with large Android tablets. Smaller tablets and phones will have most editing features for free.[216]

On June 24, 2015, Microsoft released Word, Excel and PowerPoint as standalone apps on Google Play for Android phones, following a one-month preview.[217] These apps have also been bundled with Android devices from major OEMs, as a result of Microsoft tying distribution of them and Skype to patent-licensing agreements related to the Android platform.[218][219][220] The Android version is also supported on certain ChromeOS machines.[221]

On February 19, 2020, Microsoft announced a new unified Office mobile app for Android and iOS. This app combines Word, Excel, and PowerPoint into a single app and introduces new capabilities as making quick notes, signing PDFs, scanning QR codes, and transferring files.[21]

Online versions

[edit]

Office Web Apps was first revealed in October 2008 at PDC 2008 in Los Angeles.[222] Chris Capossela, senior vice president of Microsoft business division, introduced Office Web Apps as lightweight versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote that allow people to create, edit and collaborate on Office documents through a web browser. According to Capossela, Office Web Apps was to become available as a part of Office Live Workspace.[223] Office Web Apps was announced to be powered by AJAX as well as Silverlight; however, the latter is optional and its availability will only "enhance the user experience, resulting in sharper images and improved rendering."[224] Microsoft's Business Division President Stephen Elop stated during PDC 2008 that "a technology preview of Office Web Apps would become available later in 2008".[225] However, the Technical Preview of Office Web Apps was not released until 2009.

On July 13, 2009, Microsoft announced at its Worldwide Partners Conference 2009 in New Orleans that Microsoft Office 2010 reached its "Technical Preview" development milestone and features of Office Web Apps were demonstrated to the public for the first time.[226] Additionally, Microsoft announced that Office Web Apps would be made available to consumers online and free of charge, while Microsoft Software Assurance customers will have the option of running them on premises. Office 2010 beta testers were not given access to Office Web Apps at this date, and it was announced that it would be available for testers during August 2009.[227] However, in August 2009, a Microsoft spokesperson stated that there had been a delay in the release of Office Web Apps Technical Preview and it would not be available by the end of August.[228]

Microsoft officially released the Technical Preview of Office Web Apps on September 17, 2009.[229] Office Web Apps was made available to selected testers via its OneDrive (at the time Skydrive) service. The final version of Office Web Apps was made available to the public via Windows Live Office on June 7, 2010.[22]

On October 22, 2012, Microsoft announced the release of new features including co-authoring, performance improvements and touch support.[230]

On November 6, 2013, Microsoft announced further new features including real-time co-authoring and an Auto-Save feature in Word (replacing the save button).[231][28][29]

In February 2014, Office Web Apps were re-branded Office Online and incorporated into other Microsoft web services, including Calendar, OneDrive, Outlook.com, and People.[232] Microsoft had previously attempted to unify its online services suite (including Microsoft Passport, Hotmail, MSN Messenger, and later SkyDrive) under a brand known as Windows Live, first launched in 2005. However, with the impending launch of Windows 8 and its increased use of cloud services, Microsoft dropped the Windows Live brand to emphasize that these services would now be built directly into Windows and not merely be a "bolted on" add-on. Critics had criticized the Windows Live brand for having no clear vision, as it was being applied to an increasingly broad array of unrelated services.[233][234] At the same time, Windows Live Hotmail was re-launched as Outlook.com (sharing its name with the Microsoft Outlook personal information manager).[235]

In July 2019, Microsoft announced that they were retiring the "Online" branding for Office Online. The product is now Office, and may be referred to as "Office for the web" or "Office in a browser".[236]

Logo history

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Microsoft Office is a suite of applications developed by Microsoft Corporation, first released on October 1, 1990, for Microsoft Windows, initially bundling 1.1, Excel 2.0, and PowerPoint 2.0 as integrated tools for word processing, spreadsheet analysis, and presentation creation. Over decades, it expanded to include core applications such as Outlook for and management, Access for database operations, and Publisher for , establishing industry standards through features like the ribbon interface introduced in 2007 and standardized file formats including .docx, .xlsx, and .pptx. The suite's evolution into the subscription-based service, launched in 2011 as Office 365, shifted focus to with real-time collaboration, cross-device synchronization, and AI integrations like Copilot for automated content generation, driving annual revenues exceeding tens of billions in the productivity and business processes segment. Microsoft Office commands a dominant market position in office , powering workflows in enterprises, governments, and education worldwide, though it has faced antitrust scrutiny, including a 2024 determination that bundling with Office violated competition rules by foreclosing rivals.

Overview

Definition and Core Applications

Microsoft Office is a suite of client and server software applications designed for productivity, document management, data analysis, and communication, developed by Microsoft Corporation. First announced by on August 1, 1988, at the trade show, the initial version bundled , Excel, and PowerPoint for the Macintosh platform, with a release on August 1, 1989. The Windows version followed on October 1, 1990, establishing Office as a standard for office productivity tools. The core applications form the foundation of the suite, enabling users to perform essential tasks in professional and personal environments. serves as the primary , supporting text editing, formatting, and document creation with features like templates and collaboration tools. provides functionality for data organization, calculation, and visualization through formulas, charts, and pivot tables, handling over one billion rows in modern versions. facilitates the design of slide-based presentations, incorporating elements, animations, and transitions for effective communication. Supporting these are integral applications like , which manages email, calendars, contacts, and tasks in a unified interface, integrating with enterprise systems for over 300 million active users as of recent reports. offers digital note-taking with , audio recording, and searchable organization across devices. In professional editions, enables creation and management, while Publisher aids in for newsletters and marketing materials. These components interoperate via shared file formats and APIs, promoting seamless workflows within the ecosystem.

Market Position and Economic Impact

Microsoft Office, rebranded under the subscription model since 2020, holds a significant position in the global market, commanding approximately 30% share as of early 2025, trailing Google Workspace's 44%. This dominance stems from its entrenched use in enterprise environments, where compatibility with legacy file formats and integration with Windows ecosystems create high switching costs for users. Alternative suites like and Apple capture niche segments, but lack comparable enterprise adoption due to challenges. The global office software market, encompassing suites for word processing, spreadsheets, and presentations, reached an estimated $29.51 billion in for 2025. 365's commercial offerings contribute substantially to 's Productivity and Business Processes segment, which reported a 13% increase to approximately $121 billion for 2025 (ended June 30, 2025), driven by $10.8 billion growth in commercial cloud services. This segment's performance reflects the shift from perpetual licenses to recurring subscriptions, with over 400 million paid seats as of mid-2025, bolstering 's overall fiscal 2025 of $281.7 billion. Economically, Microsoft Office enhances organizational productivity by standardizing document creation and collaboration, with Forrester Consulting studies—commissioned by Microsoft—estimating that adopters of Microsoft 365 E3 achieve up to 70 hours of annual end-user time savings through integrated tools like Teams and Copilot, yielding modeled three-year ROIs of 132% to 353% for small and medium businesses. These gains arise from reduced IT support needs (e.g., 45% fewer tickets via management tools) and avoided hardware costs, though such projections rely on composite organizational models and may overstate benefits due to selection bias in participant surveys. Broader impacts include fostering vendor lock-in, which has drawn antitrust scrutiny in regions like the European Union, where interoperability mandates have aimed to curb Office's de facto standard status since the 1990s. Despite this, its role in enabling scalable knowledge work underpins trillions in global GDP contributions from office-based sectors, as standardized tools reduce coordination frictions in multinational firms.

Evolution from Standalone Suite to Cloud Ecosystem

Microsoft Office originated as a collection of standalone desktop applications distributed through perpetual licenses, with the inaugural bundled version, Office 1.0, released on November 19, 1990, for , comprising Word 1.0, Excel 2.0, and PowerPoint 3.0. Subsequent releases, such as Office 95 in August 1995 and Office 97 in 1996, perpetuated this model, emphasizing local installation, offline functionality, and proprietary file formats stored on like floppy disks or CDs. These versions prioritized feature enhancements for individual productivity on personal computers, without native connectivity or subscription-based access. The initial forays into occurred in the late 2000s, with introducing Office Live in 2007 as an online companion service, followed by Office Web Apps in 2010, which enabled basic browser-based viewing and editing of documents using technologies. This marked a tentative shift toward hybrid usage, allowing limited collaboration via internet-hosted files, though core functionality remained tied to desktop installations. The pivotal transition accelerated with the launch of Office 365 on June 28, 2011, initially targeted at businesses, offering a subscription model that bundled cloud-hosted services including Exchange Online for email, SharePoint Online for collaboration, and desktop application access with automatic updates. By 2013, Office 365 expanded to consumers alongside Office 2013, integrating deeper cloud storage via SkyDrive (rebranded as in 2014), enabling real-time co-authoring and file syncing across devices. This evolution from perpetual licenses to a subscription ecosystem culminated in the April 21, 2020, rebranding of consumer Office 365 plans to , reflecting a broader scope that incorporated tools beyond traditional Office apps, such as cloud-based AI integrations and enhanced security features. The subscription model, priced monthly or annually, provided continuous updates, 1 TB of storage per user, and cross-platform access, contrasting with one-time purchase versions like Office 2021, which lack ongoing support after a fixed period. Key enablers included SharePoint's maturation into a cloud-first platform for enterprise document management and intranets, with over 200 petabytes of monthly by 2023, and 's role in personal file syncing, supporting features like Files On-Demand for efficient local-cloud hybrid workflows. This cloud-centric approach facilitated scalability, reduced IT overhead for perpetual installations, and positioned against competitors like by emphasizing seamless integration within the Azure ecosystem.

Components

Desktop Applications

The desktop applications in Microsoft Office constitute the installable productivity suite primarily designed for offline use on Windows and macOS systems, distinguishing them from web-based or mobile counterparts by offering advanced features, extensibility, and performance optimized for local execution. These applications are delivered through subscriptions or perpetual licenses such as Office LTSC 2024, with availability varying by edition; for instance, basic consumer plans include Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, while professional editions add Outlook, Access, and Publisher. Access and Publisher remain Windows-exclusive, reflecting their specialized requirements for desktop integration and legacy compatibility. Microsoft Word serves as the flagship word processor, enabling users to create, edit, and format documents with tools for text manipulation, styles, references, and collaboration features like track changes and comments. It supports complex layouts, , and integration with external data sources, with desktop versions providing superior macro support via (VBA) compared to web editions. First released in 1983 for and integrated into the Office suite from its inception, Word has evolved to include AI-assisted editing in recent iterations. Desktop installations often require signing in with a Microsoft account to activate the product, access full features, or use cloud services, displaying a "Sign in required" screen in the set display language; in Arabic, this appears as "تسجيل الدخول مطلوب" (tasjīl al-dukhūl matlūb). Users proceed by entering their Microsoft account email or phone number, clicking "التالي" (Next) or "تسجيل الدخول" (Sign in), then providing the password; an option to create an account ("إنشاء حساب") is available if needed. To change the Office display language to English afterward, open Word, navigate to ملف (File) > خيارات (Options) > اللغة (Language), add and prioritize English under Office display language, and restart the application. If inaccessible due to the prompt, adjust Windows display language via Settings > Time & Language > Language or reinstall Office selecting the English version from the Microsoft account portal. Microsoft Excel functions as a spreadsheet application for data analysis, offering calculation engines, charting, pivot tables, and conditional formatting to handle large datasets and financial modeling. Desktop Excel excels in power user scenarios with advanced functions, solver add-ins, and VBA automation for custom scripts, processing millions of rows efficiently on local hardware. Introduced in 1985 for Mac and bundled in Office 1.0 for Windows in 1990, it has become indispensable for quantitative tasks, with ongoing updates enhancing data visualization and integration with external databases. Microsoft PowerPoint facilitates the creation of slide-based presentations, incorporating elements, animations, transitions, and designer templates for visual storytelling. The desktop version supports high-fidelity rendering, custom themes, and export options like 4K video, surpassing browser limitations in and complexity. Acquired by in and included in early bundles, PowerPoint standardized presentation formats and now features AI-driven slide suggestions. Additional desktop tools expand the suite's scope: manages email, calendars, contacts, and tasks with rules, search folders, and integration to Exchange servers for enterprise email handling. provides digital notebook functionality for capturing text, handwriting, audio, and clippings, organized hierarchically with search across multimedia content. specializes in page layout and design for brochures, newsletters, and flyers, leveraging templates and precise control over print elements. offers relational database management, including forms, queries, reports, and SQL support for small-scale data applications. These components, while not universal across all licenses, underscore the desktop suite's emphasis on professional-grade tools unavailable or limited in cloud versions.

Server and Enterprise Tools

Microsoft Office's server and enterprise tools primarily consist of on-premises server products designed to extend the suite's collaboration, document management, and project oversight capabilities to large-scale organizational deployments. These include Server for content sharing and intranet development, Project Server for portfolio management, and Office Online Server for browser-based file rendering. Unlike the client-focused desktop applications, these tools operate on dedicated servers, integrating with Office apps like Word, Excel, and Outlook to enable centralized workflows, , and multi-user access. SharePoint Server, first released in 2001 and available in versions such as and the Subscription Edition (introduced in 2021), functions as a web-based platform for storing, organizing, and sharing documents across teams. It supports features like sites for project collaboration, lists for data tracking, libraries for file versioning with metadata, and integration with for permissions management. Organizations deploy it to build custom intranets, manage workflows via Power Automate connectors, and host Visio diagrams or Excel services for interactive reporting without requiring desktop installations. As of 2025, it remains a key on-premises option for needs, though Microsoft emphasizes hybrid or cloud alternatives like for scalability. Project Server, offered in Subscription Edition as of 2022, provides enterprise-grade (PPM) by centralizing data on a server backend. It enables across multiple projects, tracking, , and customizable dashboards via integration with Power BI for . Administrators can manage enterprise custom fields, lookup tables, and security groups, supporting up to thousands of users in regulated industries requiring audit trails. The tool's scalability stems from its SQL Server dependency and web interface (Project Web App), allowing remote access without full Project client licenses for all users. Office Online Server (previously Office Web Apps Server) delivers server-side rendering for Office files, enabling co-authoring and viewing in browsers without client software, particularly useful in hybrid environments with or Exchange. Deployed since 2013, it handles formats like .docx and .xlsx through IIS-hosted services, supporting up to 10,000 concurrent users per farm in configured topologies. However, Microsoft announced end-of-support for December 31, 2026, recommending migration to for ongoing web functionality, citing maintenance costs and cloud efficiencies. These tools historically addressed enterprise demands for control over data centers and compliance, but adoption has declined with the rise of SaaS models; for instance, Project Server licenses are now bundled with E3/E5 plans for hybrid use. Integration relies on protocols like and APIs, ensuring compatibility with desktop Office versions from 2013 onward, though server-side of Office apps is discouraged due to performance and stability issues in unattended scenarios.

Web and Cloud Services

Office for the web, previously known as Office Online and Office Web Apps, provides browser-based access to core Microsoft Office applications including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote, enabling users to create, edit, and collaborate on documents without installing desktop software. Launched on June 7, 2010, these web apps initially offered limited functionality compared to desktop versions but have evolved to support real-time co-authoring and integration with . Microsoft 365 subscriptions incorporate these web apps alongside cloud services such as , which provides 1 TB of storage per user for file syncing and sharing across devices. Real-time features allow multiple users to edit documents simultaneously, with changes syncing instantly via the , reducing version conflicts common in email-based workflows. Enterprise deployments leverage and Azure Active Directory for secure, scalable access control and data governance. A free tier of for the web exists for basic use, requiring only a , while premium features like advanced formatting and offline editing demand a subscription. As of 2024, these services emphasize cross-platform compatibility, supporting major browsers on Windows, macOS, and mobile devices, with ongoing updates enhancing AI-assisted functionalities through optional connected experiences. This cloud-centric model, introduced prominently with Office 365 in 2011, shifted Microsoft from perpetual licenses to subscription-based access, prioritizing recurring revenue and continuous feature delivery.

Mobile and Cross-Platform Apps

Microsoft Office mobile applications trace their origins to 1996, when the company released Pocket Office for Windows CE 1.0 handheld PCs, providing scaled-down versions of Word and Excel for portable devices. This suite evolved into Office Mobile with the launch of in 2005, incorporating additional tools like PowerPoint Mobile and supporting file viewing and basic editing on smartphones. Office Mobile 2010 debuted alongside on October 21, 2010, extending native support to Microsoft's mobile OS with integrated cloud features via Windows Live SkyDrive (later ). Expansion beyond Windows occurred in 2013, driven by the growing dominance of and Android ecosystems. Microsoft released Office Mobile for on June 14, 2013, enabling free viewing and editing of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint documents with integration. Android phone support followed on July 31, 2013, with similar functionality optimized for touch interfaces. Tablet versions arrived later: on March 27, 2014, and Android tablets on January 29, 2015, initially requiring an Office 365 subscription for full editing on screens larger than 10.1 inches, while smaller devices offered basic features for free personal use. By 2021, the suite included OneNote Mobile, with apps supporting real-time co-authoring, PDF export, and scanning for . To streamline development across platforms, Microsoft adopted cross-platform technologies, notably React Native, which allows code sharing between iOS and Android apps while maintaining native performance. This approach facilitated the February 19, 2020, launch of a unified Office app for Android and iOS, consolidating Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and PDF tools into a single interface for quicker updates and feature parity. As of 2025, these apps run on iOS/iPadOS (version 15+), Android (8.0+), and ChromeOS via the Google Play Store, with Windows Phone support discontinued after July 2017. Core features include touch-optimized ribbons, offline editing with OneDrive sync, and integration with Microsoft 365 for premium capabilities like advanced formulas in Excel or Designer in PowerPoint, requiring a subscription starting at $6.99/month for personal use. Cross-platform compatibility extends to file handling, with mobile apps supporting the Open XML format (.docx, .xlsx, .pptx) and to legacy binary formats via converters, ensuring seamless transitions from desktop versions. Security features mirror desktop counterparts, including password protection and two-factor for linked accounts, though mobile versions prioritize lightweight performance over full enterprise tools like macros. Usage data indicates over 500 million active devices as of 2023, reflecting broad adoption despite initial Windows-centric roots.

Features and Technical Specifications

Shared Functionality and User Interface Innovations

Microsoft Office applications share core functionalities such as real-time co-authoring, which allows multiple users to edit documents simultaneously in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote when files are stored on or , a feature enabled through cloud integration introduced in the early 2010s and expanded with subscriptions. This capability relies on connected experiences that analyze content for suggestions and enable seamless data linking across apps, like embedding Excel charts in Word or PowerPoint, facilitating without . A pivotal user interface innovation was the introduction of the in Office 2007, replacing traditional menus with tabbed panels grouping related commands—such as , Insert, and tabs—across Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Access, which enhanced feature discoverability and reduced task completion time by contextualizing tools based on user workflow. The 's design philosophy emphasized visual grouping and screentips for quicker learning, though initial adoption faced resistance from users accustomed to menu-driven interfaces; subsequent versions refined it with mini-toolbars and customizable quick access bars. Further UI advancements in include a simplified, coherent visual redesign rolled out starting in 2023, featuring fluid forms, vibrant icons, and adaptive themes like dark mode to reduce , applied consistently across desktop, web, and mobile versions for cross-platform familiarity. Accessibility innovations, such as the enhanced Accessibility Checker updated in Office 2024, scan documents for issues like missing alt text or complex tables and provide remediation guidance, integrating with the for inline suggestions and supporting screen readers via improved semantic markup. These features extend shared functionality by embedding AI-driven insights, like content suggestions in Excel and PowerPoint, while prioritizing empirical metrics over stylistic preferences.

File Formats, Compatibility, and Metadata

Microsoft Office applications primarily utilize the Open XML (OOXML) format for documents created in versions from 2007 onward, encompassing extensions such as .docx for Word, .xlsx for Excel, and .pptx for PowerPoint; these are ZIP-archived packages containing XML files for content, styles, and relationships, enabling structured data representation and partial editing without full installation. Earlier versions rely on binary formats like .doc, .xls, and .ppt, which store data in a compact, non-XML structure optimized for performance but less interoperable and harder to parse externally. supports by allowing newer versions to open and save in legacy binary formats, though this may trigger , disabling certain modern features to preserve fidelity. OOXML was standardized by on December 7, 2006, as ECMA-376, and subsequently approved as an international standard, ISO/IEC 29500, in 2008 after a contentious fast-track involving ballot resolutions for technical discrepancies. This standardization aimed to facilitate vendor-independent implementation, but Microsoft's implementation includes proprietary extensions not fully covered by the spec, leading to imperfect interoperability with alternatives like . For cross-format support, provides import and for Format (ODF) versions 1.1 and later since 2007, though complex documents may lose formatting or macros due to structural differences between OOXML and ODF. PDF export is native for read-only distribution, preserving layout via rendering rather than editable XML, while import treats PDFs as flat content with potential reflow issues. Files embed metadata as document properties, including (derived from the creating user's Windows or Office profile), , subject, keywords, revision count (incrementing on saves), creation and modification dates, and total editing time; these are stored in XML parts like core.xml or app.xml within OOXML packages. Additional hidden metadata may include comments, tracked changes, invisible content, or print settings, which persist unless explicitly removed via the Document Inspector tool, introduced in Office 2007 to scan and purge personal information for privacy compliance. In binary formats, metadata is embedded in streams like SummaryInformation, accessible via properties dialogs but more opaque to external tools. Compatibility considerations extend to metadata retention during format conversions, where ODF exports may strip Office-specific properties, and vice versa, potentially complicating forensic or audit trails.

Extensibility, Automation, and Integration

Microsoft Office provides extensibility through (VBA), a programming language introduced in 1993 with Excel 5.0 as a replacement for earlier macro languages, enabling users to create custom functions, automate repetitive tasks, and interact with application objects across Office programs like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. VBA supports , allowing scripts to respond to user actions or data changes, and facilitates inter-application communication via COM automation for tasks such as data transfer between Excel worksheets and Word documents. However, VBA macros carry security risks, as they can execute arbitrary code; Office implements configurable security levels, blocking macros from internet-downloaded files by default since 2022 to mitigate delivery, with options for signed macros or trusted locations requiring explicit user enablement. Add-ins extend Office functionality beyond built-in features. Traditional COM add-ins, leveraging interfaces, allow deep integration on Windows platforms for custom UI elements and automation, often developed with (VSTO) since 2005. In contrast, modern Office Add-ins, introduced around 2013 and powered by web technologies like , CSS, and , offer cross-platform compatibility across desktop, web, and mobile versions, using the Office JavaScript to access document content without requiring native code installation. These add-ins support requirement sets for feature detection, ensuring compatibility across Office versions, and are distributed via the Microsoft Store or centralized deployment. Automation in Office has evolved from VBA macros to cloud-based tools like Power Automate, launched in 2016 as Microsoft Flow and rebranded, which enables no-code or low-code workflows integrating Office apps with external services for tasks such as approval processes, data synchronization between Excel and SharePoint, or email-triggered actions in Outlook. Power Automate connectors support over 1,000 services as of 2025, including desktop flows for UI automation via RPA (robotic process automation), reducing manual intervention in enterprise scenarios while adhering to licensing tiers like Premium for advanced features at $15 per user monthly. Integration leverages APIs for broader ecosystem connectivity. The Office JavaScript APIs provide programmatic access to document models, enabling add-ins to manipulate content like Excel ranges or Word paragraphs in real-time. , a RESTful API unified since 2015, allows developers to integrate Office data with Microsoft 365 services, such as querying files or Outlook calendars from external apps, supporting authentication for secure access. These tools facilitate enterprise solutions, like embedding Power BI analytics in Excel or syncing Teams notifications with Office documents, prioritizing API-based extensibility over legacy COM for scalability and security.

Security Measures and Password Protection

Microsoft Office implements password protection primarily through file-level , allowing users to restrict access to documents, workbooks, and presentations by requiring a for opening or modifying contents. This is enabled via the File > Info > Protect / > Encrypt with option, where entering and confirming a applies to the entire file upon saving. Separate passwords can be set for opening (full ) versus modifying (weaker restrictions), though the former is recommended for sensitive data. Encryption relies on the (AES), with key lengths varying by version and configuration; Office 2007 and later default to AES-128 in CBC mode with hashing for compatibility with the Office Open XML (OOXML) format, while Microsoft 365 apps adopted AES-256-CBC as the default by October 2023 to bolster resistance to cryptanalytic attacks. Earlier versions, such as Office 97-2003, used weaker RC4-based encryption, which permitted efficient brute-force cracking with specialized tools due to short keys and predictable hashing. Office 2013 enhanced this with optional SHA-512 hashing and AES-256 support, reducing vulnerability to dictionary and attacks. Despite these advances, remains the primary limiter; weak or reused passwords can be compromised via or offline attacks, as protects only against unauthorized access without the key. advises passwords of at least 12-14 characters incorporating uppercase/lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols to mitigate this. Complementary features include , a sandboxed read-only mode that blocks macros, editing, and active content in files from untrusted sources like email attachments or downloads, prompting users to enable editing only after verification. In PowerPoint, recording features such as Record Slide Show, narration recording, and screen recording are disabled in Protected View or view-only/read-only modes, as they require editing the presentation to add or modify audio, timings, ink annotations, or embedded videos, which are restricted to prevent security risks from untrusted sources. To enable these, users can click "Enable Editing" on the yellow message bar in Protected View; for read-only files, save a copy via File > Save As or remove read-only attributes in file properties. For enterprise scenarios, Information Rights Management (IRM), powered by Azure Rights Management Service (RMS), extends beyond passwords by applying persistent policies such as expiration dates, user-specific access revocation, and prohibitions on or , enforceable across devices and even after . IRM uses 2048-bit RSA keys with SHA-256 for integrity in integrations. Macro security levels—ranging from disabling all macros to signed-only execution—further guard against embedded , with automatic updates delivering patches for discovered vulnerabilities. These measures collectively address common vectors like file-based exploits, though they require user diligence and administrative configuration for optimal efficacy.

Platforms and Deployment

Windows Ecosystem

Microsoft Office applications exhibit their most comprehensive functionality and deepest system-level integration within the Windows operating system, leveraging native APIs for performance, security, and user experience enhancements unavailable or limited on other platforms. Developed initially for Windows in 1989 with Microsoft Office 1.0, the suite has evolved alongside the OS, utilizing Win32 and later elements for core operations such as rendering, input handling, and extensibility. This native optimization enables features like hardware-accelerated graphics via in PowerPoint animations and Excel charts, ensuring smoother performance on Windows hardware compared to emulated or web-based alternatives. Key Windows-exclusive capabilities include advanced digital inking powered by the Windows Ink API, which supports pressure-sensitive stylus input, ink-to-text conversion, and replay functions in apps like Word and OneNote, optimized for devices such as Surface tablets. For instance, in Office 2021 and later versions, inking tools allow real-time and mathematical equation solving in OneNote, with seamless integration into Windows touch gestures and multi-monitor setups via Snap Layouts in Windows 11. Automation scripting through (VBA) is more robust on Windows, supporting complex macros, controls, and COM add-ins that enable custom integrations with Windows system components, such as direct access to registry or device drivers—features partially restricted or absent on macOS due to platform differences. Security and authentication tie directly into Windows infrastructure, including via Windows Hello for Office app access and Azure for enterprise deployments, reducing login friction in domain-joined environments. Clipboard synchronization with Windows history and search indexing via further streamlines workflows, allowing users to paste across apps or locate Office files without leaving the OS shell. In enterprise settings, Office integrates with Windows management tools like for policy enforcement, app deployment, and compliance scanning using Windows Defender ATP. Recent advancements emphasize AI-driven synergy, with embedded across Office apps and the Windows since its expansion in 2023, enabling context-aware assistance like generating Excel formulas from or summarizing Word documents while leveraging Windows-level permissions for file access. This contrasts with lighter implementations on web or mobile versions, where Copilot lacks full OS context. Overall, Windows provides the richest ecosystem for Office, prioritizing power users and enterprises reliant on heavy computation, though it demands more system resources than streamlined web editions.

macOS and Cross-Platform Support

Microsoft Office has provided native support for macOS since 1989, with the initial release of Office 1.0 bundling , Excel, and PowerPoint for Macintosh systems. Subsequent versions, such as Office 98 Macintosh Edition released on January 6, 1998, introduced integrations like 4.0 and . Over the decades, Office for Mac evolved to include major releases like Office 2011 (2010), Office 2016, Office 2019 (end of support October 10, 2023), Office 2021, and Office 2024, alongside the subscription-based apps. These versions maintain feature parity with Windows counterparts where possible, though macOS editions omit applications like Access and Publisher due to platform-specific development constraints. Cross-platform compatibility is facilitated through standardized file formats such as .docx, .xlsx, and .pptx, enabling seamless document exchange between macOS and Windows users, though minor rendering differences can occur in complex layouts or macros. subscriptions provide native desktop applications on Windows and macOS, mobile apps on iOS and Android, and web-based access across platforms, allowing users to access and edit files via synchronization without platform-specific licensing barriers for subscribers. Perpetual licenses, however, require separate purchases for Mac and Windows editions, as seen with , which does not permit cross-platform activation under a single key. Microsoft 365 desktop applications lack official native support on Linux. As of February 2026, running them via compatibility layers such as Wine, Proton, or Bottles remains unreliable. WineHQ rates Office 365 as "Garbage," citing major issues including black screens, installation failures, and crashes in recent tests with Wine 11.0. Bottles supports only older versions like Office 2016, with persistent UI bugs, crashes, and incomplete functionality for modern Microsoft 365 or Office 2024. Proton, oriented toward gaming, reports no successful Office deployments. Recommended alternatives for Linux users include web-based Microsoft Office or virtual machines hosting Windows. Office for Mac supports the three most recent major macOS versions to ensure optimal performance and security updates, with and Office 2024 requiring upgrades from unsupported systems like for continued feature delivery as of 2025. Differences persist in applications like Outlook, where the macOS version lacks certain Windows-exclusive features such as advanced search folders and integrated Windows-specific add-ins. Despite these variances, core productivity functions remain consistent, supporting hybrid work environments through cloud-based collaboration tools.

Mobile and Web Accessibility

Microsoft Office offers dedicated mobile applications for and Android platforms, allowing users to access, edit, and create documents on smartphones and tablets. These apps, part of , support core functionalities of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and other suite components, with editing capabilities available for free on devices under 10.1 inches and requiring a subscription for larger screens. The unified Office mobile app, which consolidates Word, Excel, and PowerPoint into one interface, was released on February 19, 2020, for both Android and to streamline productivity tasks on the go. Mobile versions emphasize touch-optimized interfaces for creation, collaboration, and organization, but feature sets are curtailed compared to desktop counterparts, omitting advanced tools like macros, comprehensive grammar checking, and complex . For instance, Excel mobile supports basic formulas and charts but lacks creation and integration available in the full application. Support for Android is restricted to the last four major OS versions since July 1, 2019, ensuring compatibility with recent hardware while phasing out older devices. These apps facilitate real-time co-authoring via or , bridging mobile use with desktop workflows, though offline editing is limited to recently accessed files. For web accessibility, for the web—formerly Office Online—provides browser-based versions of the suite, enabling document interaction without local installation on any internet-connected device. Launched as part of the broader Office 365 ecosystem in 2013, these web apps support essential editing, formatting, and sharing features across Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. Free access is available for basic use, with premium features tied to subscriptions for enhanced collaboration and storage. Web apps prioritize cross-device compatibility and seamless integration with cloud services, allowing multiple users to edit simultaneously, but they deliver a subset of desktop capabilities, such as restricted table manipulations in Word or absence of VBA scripting. Unlike desktop installations, web versions require constant connectivity and may exhibit performance variances based on browser and network conditions, making them suitable for lightweight tasks rather than intensive professional workflows. Both mobile and web platforms underscore Microsoft's shift toward cloud-centric accessibility, reducing barriers for casual users while directing power users to desktop for full fidelity.

Support Lifecycles and Update Policies

Microsoft Office perpetual license versions, such as Office 2019 and Office LTSC 2021, adhere to the Fixed Lifecycle Policy, providing defined periods of mainstream and extended support during which Microsoft delivers security updates, non-security hotfixes, and free or paid support. For Office 2019, mainstream support lasted five years until October 14, 2020, followed by two years of extended support ending on October 14, 2025, deviating from the standard ten-year policy to encourage migration to subscription models. Similarly, Office 2016 reached end of support on October 14, 2025, after which no further updates or technical support are provided, though the applications remain functional. Microsoft Office LTSC (Long Term Servicing Channel) is the official name for the volume-licensed, on-premises version of Office designed for regulated or restricted environments requiring stability without feature updates; "LTS" is not an official Microsoft term and refers informally to LTSC. Starting with the 2021 release, the commercial on-premises Office suite is named Office LTSC (e.g., Office LTSC 2024), distinct from consumer one-time purchase Office 2024 and subscription-based Microsoft 365 Apps. Office LTSC editions follow a shortened support timeline. Office LTSC 2021 receives mainstream support until October 13, 2026, with no extended support phase, emphasizing Microsoft's push toward cloud-integrated alternatives. Office LTSC extends this to five years of mainstream support ending in October 2029, explicitly excluding extended support to align with modernization goals. In contrast, Apps operate under the Modern Lifecycle Policy, offering continuous support without a fixed end date, contingent on active subscriptions and adherence to update requirements for security and compatibility. This model mandates keeping applications and underlying operating systems current; for instance, Apps on receive security updates until October 10, 2028, despite Windows 10's end of support on October 14, 2025, provided devices meet configuration standards. Update policies for Apps are managed through configurable channels that balance feature delivery speed with stability. The Monthly Enterprise Channel provides the latest features monthly, suitable for early adopters, while the Semi-Annual Enterprise Channel defers major updates to twice-yearly releases for controlled rollouts. Administrators configure these via the Office Deployment Tool, , or , enabling options like automatic updates from Microsoft servers or deferrals up to 180 days for testing. Perpetual versions cease feature updates post-release, limiting changes to bug fixes and security patches within their support windows.
VersionMainstream Support EndExtended Support EndPolicy TypeNotes
Office 2016October 13, 2020October 14, 2025FixedNo updates after end of support.
Office 2019October 14, 2020October 14, 2025Fixed (exception)5+2 years total.
Office LTSC 2021October 13, 2026NoneFixedEnterprise-focused, no extended phase.
Office LTSC 2024October 2029NoneFixed5 years mainstream only.
Microsoft 365 AppsOngoingOngoingModernSubscription-required; channel-dependent.

Business Model and Licensing

Editions, Pricing Structures, and Subscriptions

Microsoft Office is distributed primarily through subscription plans, which provide access to the latest versions of applications across multiple devices, , and additional services like security and AI tools, contrasted with perpetual licenses offering one-time purchases for fixed versions without subscription commitments. Consumer editions include Personal for individual users and Family for sharing among up to six people, while and enterprise variants scale features for organizational needs, such as advanced compliance and collaboration tools. Perpetual options, like Office 2024 Home & Student or volume-licensed Office LTSC 2024, target users preferring no recurring costs but receive only security updates, not new features. Microsoft Office LTSC (Long Term Servicing Channel) refers to the volume-licensed, on-premises version designed for regulated or restricted environments requiring stability without feature updates; there is no separate official product called Microsoft Office LTS, as "LTS" is a shorthand, typo, or misnomer for LTSC. Starting with the 2021 release, the commercial on-premises Office suite is named Office LTSC (e.g., Office LTSC 2024), distinct from consumer one-time purchase Office 2024 and subscription-based Microsoft 365 Apps. Subscription pricing follows per-user monthly or annual billing, with discounts for annual commitments, and has seen increases in 2025 to reflect added AI capabilities like Copilot integration across Personal and plans starting January 16, 2025. Enterprise plans emphasize with user-based costs, often customized via resellers. Perpetual licenses are device-bound, non-transferable in retail editions, and available via one-time payments through or authorized channels.
PlanPricing (US, as of 2025)Key Features
$9.99/month or $99.99/yearApps (Word, Excel, etc.) for 1 user on 5 devices, 1 TB , Copilot AI, tools.
$12.99/month or $129.99/yearSame apps for up to 6 users, 6 TB total storage, family sharing.
$6/user/month (annual)Email, Teams, 1 TB storage, web/mobile apps; no desktop apps.
$12.50/user/month (annual)Adds desktop apps, webinar hosting.
$36/user/month (annual)Full desktop apps, advanced , compliance, unlimited storage.
$149.99 one-time (retail estimate)Core apps (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote); no Outlook, limited to one device.
Varies by reseller/volumeEnterprise suite for specialized deployments; long-term support, no cloud features.
Business model shifts favor subscriptions for predictable revenue and feature delivery, with perpetual sales comprising a shrinking share since Office 2013's last broad consumer perpetual release, though LTSC persists for regulated environments avoiding frequent changes. Pricing varies by region, with 2025 hikes of up to 30% in some markets tied to and enhancements, prompting users to weigh ongoing access against upfront costs.

Enterprise and Education Offerings

Microsoft 365 Enterprise plans, such as and E5, provide organizations with access to the full suite of Office applications including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook, alongside advanced security, compliance, and analytics tools like Microsoft Purview for data governance and Microsoft Defender for threat protection. These plans support unlimited users and emphasize scalability for large-scale deployments, with offering core productivity features and 1 TB of storage per user, while E5 adds premium capabilities such as advanced threat analytics and voice services. Pricing for is typically $36 per user per month (annual commitment), enabling enterprises to integrate cloud-based collaboration via Teams and endpoint management through Intune. Frontline worker plans like F3 cater to non-desk-based employees, providing limited web and mobile app access, scheduling tools, and safety features without desktop installations, at around $8 per user per month. options allow for perpetual licenses of Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise, permitting one-time purchases for deployment on more than five devices, though subscriptions dominate due to ongoing updates and cloud integration. Device-based licensing simplifies for shared devices, assigning licenses to hardware rather than users to reduce administrative overhead in high-usage environments. For education, Microsoft 365 A1 offers free basic access to web and mobile versions of apps, email via Exchange Online, and Teams for qualified students and educators with a valid email, including 1 TB storage to support collaborative learning without cost barriers. Advanced plans like A3 and A5 extend to desktop apps and enhanced , with A5 incorporating safety and compliance tools tailored for institutional needs, available through for faculty and staff. These offerings integrate education-specific features, such as Education Edition and immersive reader tools in OneNote, to foster skill development, while eligibility verification ensures targeted deployment to accredited institutions. As of May 2025, plans include services like for content management, promoting equitable access amid varying institutional budgets.

Perpetual vs. Subscription Dynamics

Perpetual licenses for Microsoft Office allow users to purchase a specific version outright for a one-time directly from Microsoft's website or authorized retailers such as Amazon, Best Buy, and Walmart, granting indefinite to use that software without recurring payments. For instance, as of February 2026, Walmart sells multiple HP model laptops preinstalled with activated perpetual licenses for Microsoft Office 2024 Professional Plus, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Publisher, and more. Older versions may be available from third-party sellers, though Microsoft recommends acquiring the latest versions for optimal compatibility and support. Feature updates cease after release and security support is time-limited. For instance, Office 2021, released on October 5, 2021, provides core applications like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint with enhancements such as improved co-authoring and inking tools, but lacks ongoing cloud integrations and storage. In contrast, subscriptions require periodic payments—typically monthly or annually—for access to the latest versions, continuous feature additions, security patches, and ancillary services like 1 TB of storage per user and multi-device synchronization. The core dynamics stem from 's strategic pivot toward subscription models since the 2011 launch of Office 365, aiming for recurring revenue streams that outpace one-time sales; commercial Office 365 revenue grew 42% year-over-year in Q4 2017, compared to 10% for traditional Office products. Perpetual options persist for consumers (e.g., Office 2021 at around $150–$250 one-time) and enterprises via Long-Term Servicing Channel (LTSC) editions, designed for on-premises deployments in regulated environments seeking stability without feature updates and distinct from consumer perpetual releases, but discontinued volume perpetual licensing through the Open License program as of January 1, 2022, channeling larger customers toward subscriptions for predictability. This shift reflects causal incentives: subscriptions enable stable cash flows and data-driven upsells, while perpetual licenses appeal to users prioritizing cost certainty and avoiding dependency on vendor continuity. Support lifecycles underscore the trade-offs; perpetual versions like Office 2021 receive mainstream updates for five years post-release (ending around 2026), after which only critical security fixes may apply briefly, exposing users to vulnerabilities without patches. Subscriptions, however, provide indefinite technical support and feature parity across devices, including web and mobile access, fostering collaboration but tying utility to payment adherence—cancellation revokes access. Long-term economics favor perpetual for light, static use (e.g., breakeven after 2–3 years versus $70–$100 annual subscriptions), but subscriptions yield higher value for frequent updaters via AI integrations and cloud backups, though they can accumulate costs exceeding $500 over five years.
AspectPerpetual (e.g., Office 2021)Subscription ()
Payment ModelOne-time fee (e.g., $149.99 Home & Student)Recurring (e.g., $69.99/year Personal)
UpdatesVersion-specific; no new features post-releaseContinuous features, security, and fixes
Storage & ExtrasNone included; local-only1 TB , email, collaboration tools
Support Duration5 years mainstream; limited thereafterOngoing with active subscription
Device FlexibilityTypically 1–2 installs; no seamless syncUnlimited/multi-device with cloud sync
These models create user tensions: perpetual suits offline, budget-conscious individuals or regulated environments needing version stability, while subscriptions dominate for dynamic teams, though they amplify influence over software and raise exit barriers via ecosystems. Microsoft's emphasis on the latter has boosted —over 345 million paid seats by 2021—but perpetual remains viable for avoiding perpetual commitment to evolving terms.

Historical Development

Origins and Early Releases (1980s–1990s)

Microsoft Office emerged in the late as Microsoft's strategy to bundle its leading productivity applications—Word, Excel, and PowerPoint—into an integrated suite, responding to competitors like and that dominated standalone markets. Prior to the suite's formalization, these applications were released separately: debuted for in 1983, Excel for Macintosh in 1985, and PowerPoint (originally Forethought) was acquired and rebranded by Microsoft in 1987. The inaugural Microsoft Office 1.0 for Macintosh launched in 1989, comprising Word 4.0, Excel 2.2, and PowerPoint 2.01, marking the first commercial bundling to streamline office workflows on Apple systems. This was followed by Microsoft Office 1.0 for Windows on October 1, 1990, which included Word 1.1 for Windows, Excel 2.0, and PowerPoint 2.0, targeted at users of Windows 3.0 and requiring 2 MB of RAM minimum. An interim Office 1.5 update in March 1991 added Excel 3.0 with enhanced charting capabilities. In August 1992, Office 3.0 arrived for , incorporating Word 2.0, Excel 4.0, PowerPoint 3.0, and introducing for basic email integration, alongside the (OLE) standard for better interoperability between apps. Office 4.0, released January 1994, expanded to include 2.0 as a database tool and for , supporting with improved file formats. Microsoft Office 95 (version 7.0), launched August 24, 1995, transitioned to a partial 32-bit architecture optimized for , featuring Word 6.0, Excel 5.0, PowerPoint 4.0, Access 7.0, and the debut of Schedule+ for calendaring, emphasizing native long filenames and wizards for user assistance. The suite's Office 97 (version 8.0), released November 19, 1996, introduced the Office Assistant (Clippy), export capabilities, and enhancements, solidifying its dominance with over 90% market share in office suites by the late 1990s.

Maturation and Feature Expansions (2000s)

, released to manufacturing on March 5, 2001, and to retail on May 31, 2001, introduced as an anti-piracy measure requiring online validation, alongside task panes for streamlined access to common functions and smart tags for contextual actions like auto-correcting addresses in documents. These enhancements improved and , with features such as ink in supported applications and better integration with Windows XP's interface elements. Office 2003, released to manufacturing on August 19, 2003, and to retail on October 21, 2003, expanded the suite with native XML support for data interchange, enabling "smart documents" that leveraged XML schemas for structured content and integration with enterprise systems like for workflow automation. New applications included InfoPath for creating XML-based electronic forms and OneNote for digital note-taking with handwriting recognition and audio recording capabilities, marking a shift toward information worker tools beyond core productivity apps. The suite further matured with Office 2007, released to manufacturing on November 30, 2006, and to consumers on January 30, 2007, which overhauled the by introducing the —a tabbed toolbar replacing traditional menus—to reduce learning curves and expose advanced features more intuitively across applications like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. It adopted the Open XML file format as default (.docx, .xlsx), promoting interoperability while maintaining through conversion tools, and added Groove for collaboration on shared workspaces. These changes reflected growing emphasis on standards-based extensibility and enterprise scalability, with Excel gaining enhancements for larger datasets up to 1 million rows. Throughout the decade, editions proliferated to target segments, such as Office Small Business for simplified tools and Office Ultimate bundling specialized apps like Visio for diagramming, evidencing maturation into a modular amid rising competition from open-source alternatives.

Cloud Transition and Modernization (2010s)

Microsoft announced Office 365, a cloud-based subscription service for its Office suite, on October 19, 2010, marking the initial step toward integrating cloud capabilities into its productivity tools. The service officially launched on June 28, 2011, initially targeting businesses as a successor to the Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) introduced in 2008, offering hosted versions of Exchange, SharePoint, and Lync alongside Office applications accessible via web browsers. Office 365 enabled real-time collaboration, through SkyDrive (later rebranded ), and anytime access to documents from multiple devices, contrasting with traditional perpetual licenses by providing continuous updates and scalability. By 2013, the service expanded to consumer plans, broadening subscription access and integrating deeper with desktop applications for hybrid workflows. This period saw the evolution of Office Web Apps, refreshed in July 2012 with enhanced editing capabilities for Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote directly in browsers, supporting co-authoring and embedding in sites. The release of Office 2013 on October 16, 2012, for volume licensing and January 29, 2013, for retail, incorporated modernization through a flatter , touch-optimized controls for emerging tablets, and native integration for seamless cloud syncing and sharing across apps like Word and Excel. Office 2016, launched September 22, 2015, further advanced cloud features with support, improved real-time co-editing in desktop apps connected to , and tighter Azure Active Directory integration for enterprise security. These updates reflected Microsoft's strategic pivot under CEO , appointed in 2014, emphasizing cloud-first development to adapt to mobile and web-centric usage patterns amid stagnating desktop sales. Subscription adoption grew rapidly, with Office 365 commercial revenue reaching $1.1 billion in 2013, driven by the shift from one-time purchases to recurring fees that ensured ongoing innovation like automatic feature rollouts without version silos. However, the transition faced resistance from users preferring perpetual licenses, prompting to maintain hybrid offerings while phasing out standalone updates for older versions post-2013. By the decade's end, cloud dependencies introduced new vectors for outages, as seen in periodic service disruptions affecting global access, underscoring trade-offs in reliability for enhanced accessibility.

Recent Innovations and AI Integration (2020s)

In the early 2020s, Microsoft continued transitioning Microsoft Office toward cloud-centric, subscription-based enhancements under , with notable releases including Office 2021 on October 5, 2021, which offered perpetual licensing for enterprise users while emphasizing improved accessibility and performance features like dynamic arrays in Excel and real-time co-authoring across apps, and Office 2024 on October 1, 2024, the latest one-time purchase perpetual license version for Windows and macOS including core apps Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, and Outlook, featuring enhancements such as new Excel functions, improved accessibility checker, and session recovery, positioned as an alternative to Microsoft 365 subscriptions with security updates but no ongoing feature additions. However, the decade's defining innovations centered on integration, beginning with experimental features such as Ideas in Excel (launched in 2020 for automated insights and forecasting) and evolving into broader generative AI capabilities powered by partnerships with . These updates leveraged Azure's infrastructure to embed AI directly into productivity workflows, prioritizing data-driven automation over manual processes. Microsoft 365 Copilot, announced on March 16, 2023, represented a pivotal AI advancement, generally available for enterprise customers starting November 1, 2023, at an additional $30 per user per month atop existing subscriptions. Integrated across Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Teams, Copilot uses large language models to generate content from prompts—such as drafting emails in Outlook, creating slide decks in PowerPoint from outlines, or analyzing datasets in Excel for trends and visualizations—while grounding outputs in user-specific files to reduce hallucinations common in standalone AI tools. By September 2023, it incorporated for contextual awareness, enabling tasks like meeting summaries in Teams or personalized insights in . Expansion accelerated in 2025, with Copilot included at no extra cost for Personal and Family subscribers starting January 16, 2025, broadening access to over 84 million consumer users for features in Word (e.g., document summarization), Excel (e.g., formula generation), and the rebranded app. Ongoing monthly updates, such as the August 2025 enhancements for agent-based in Copilot Chat and pay-as-you-go extensibility, further refined its capabilities for collaborative planning and . The Copilot Fall Release on October 23, 2025, emphasized human-centered refinements, including improved reasoning, memory retention across sessions, and integration with Windows for seamless workflow continuity. These developments underscore 's strategy of layering AI onto established tools to boost efficiency, though empirical adoption data indicates varied productivity gains depending on user and .

Criticisms and Controversies

Antitrust Allegations and Market Dominance

Microsoft Office has achieved substantial market dominance in the sector, particularly in desktop applications for word processing, spreadsheets, and presentations. Estimates indicate that as of 2020, controlled approximately 86% of the overall office software market. In the U.S. , the company's suite held an 85% as of 2021, driven by widespread enterprise and compatibility advantages. This position is reinforced by network effects, where the prevalence of Office formats and integrations creates barriers for competitors, as users and organizations prioritize seamless collaboration and data preservation. Antitrust allegations against Microsoft have occasionally implicated Office's role in broader ecosystem practices, though direct scrutiny of the suite has been limited compared to the operating system. In the late U.S. Department of Justice case ( v. Microsoft, 1998–2001), regulators examined Microsoft's leverage of its Windows monopoly to favor [Internet Explorer](/page/Internet Explorer) over rivals, with Office's tight integration cited as evidence of platform control that extended to applications; the company was found to have maintained an illegal monopoly in operating systems but avoided breakup through settlement. Office's file formats and were not the primary focus, but the case highlighted how application dominance could entrench OS power. More directly relevant to Office, the European Commission has pursued cases involving bundling and tying. In 2004, the EU fined €497 million for abusing its dominance by withholding interoperability information for Windows server protocols, which indirectly affected 's compatibility with non-Microsoft systems; was required to disclose technical details and offer a version of Windows without Media Player. A pivotal recent allegation centered on bundling with 365 (now ). Following a 2020 complaint from Slack (owned by ), the Commission investigated whether this tying practice stifled in collaboration tools by leveraging 's installed base. settled in September 2025 by committing to unbundle Teams, offer subscriptions without it at a 20–40% discount (depending on region), and enhance features, thereby avoiding a fine while addressing preliminary concerns. Critics, including competitors, argued the bundling exploited 's dominance to foreclose rivals, though maintained it enhanced user value through integrated productivity. Ongoing U.S. scrutiny as of late 2024 includes Microsoft's software licensing and cloud bundling practices, potentially encompassing Office's enterprise offerings, amid concerns over exclusionary contracts and pricing that deter alternatives. These probes reflect persistent debates over whether Office's market position results from superior innovation and voluntary adoption or anticompetitive tactics like exclusive deals and format lock-in, with regulators emphasizing of harm to competition over abstract dominance.

Privacy, Security, and Data Handling Issues

Microsoft applications, particularly in their subscription model, collect diagnostic data including file names, user names, computer details, usage patterns, and crash reports to monitor performance and health, with options for required and optional data transmission configurable via . A Data Protection Impact Assessment by The Privacy Company revealed that Professional Plus Enterprise versions track individual user behaviors, storing personal data in ways that raised significant risks under European regulations, prompting calls for enhanced controls. Critics, including reports from German supervisory authorities, have highlighted that 's data processing contracts lack sufficient transparency and precision, failing to fully align with GDPR requirements for data controllers. In March 2024, the European Data Protection Supervisor ruled that the European Commission's deployment of violated data protection laws by transferring to non- entities without adequate safeguards, exposing institutional users to risks from U.S. laws like the that compel data disclosure. Similarly, investigations in 2024 found Education services infringing children's privacy rights under GDPR, as age-appropriate consents were not properly obtained or processed, with deflecting responsibility to schools. These issues stem from cloud-based data handling in services like and , where user documents are stored on servers subject to automated scanning for compliance and security, raising sovereignty concerns for organizations reliant on Office ecosystems. Security vulnerabilities in have persisted for decades, with malicious documents enabling remote execution (RCE) through exploits like CVE-2017-11882 in the Equation Editor, which remained actively targeted in phishing campaigns as of 2025 despite patches. The 2022 "Follina" vulnerability (CVE-2022-30190) allowed RCE via previewed files without macros enabled, exploited in real-world attacks, while recent 2025 flaws involve use-after-free memory corruption in components, permitting attackers to hijack systems through crafted documents. VBA macros pose ongoing risks, historically used for macro viruses that embed , leading Microsoft to block internet-sourced macros by default since updates in the 2020s to curb and payload delivery. Over 20 years of such exploits underscore 's role as a common , often via email-delivered files bypassing initial defenses. Data handling practices amplify these risks in enterprise settings, where and syncing can inadvertently expose sensitive information during breaches or compelled disclosures, though provides and compliance tools like Data Loss Prevention; however, independent audits question their efficacy against systemic flaws in vendor control over user data flows.

Vendor Lock-in, Compatibility, and Bloat Claims

Critics of Microsoft Office have long alleged that its proprietary formats, such as . for Word and .xls for Excel prior to 2007, created by evolving in undocumented ways that increased switching costs to alternatives like or early open-source suites. This opacity made it difficult for competitors to achieve full in reading or writing files, effectively tying users to Microsoft's ecosystem through barriers. A prominent real-world example occurred in , Germany, where the city migrated approximately 15,000 desktops to and (under the project) starting in 2003 to reduce costs and avoid dependency, but reversed the decision in 2017 after incurring high retraining and compatibility resolution expenses estimated at millions of euros. Officials cited persistent issues with document exchange and user productivity losses as key factors, illustrating practical lock-in despite ideological commitments to open source. In response, Microsoft transitioned to the Office Open XML (OOXML) format in Office 2007, which was standardized as ISO/IEC 29500 in 2008 to enhance interoperability by defining an XML-based structure for documents, spreadsheets, and presentations. However, detractors contend that OOXML's complexity—spanning thousands of pages and incorporating legacy binary references—perpetuates subtle lock-in, as full implementation requires replicating Microsoft-specific extensions not easily matched by rivals. Compatibility claims focus on discrepancies when opening Office files in alternatives like or , particularly for advanced features such as VBA macros, pivot tables with custom calculations, or intricate formatting that may render incorrectly or lose functionality. While basic documents often interchange seamlessly, empirical tests and user reports highlight fidelity losses in complex enterprise workflows, prompting Microsoft to include a built-in Compatibility Checker since Office 2007 to flag potential issues before saving. These gaps stem from Office's evolution prioritizing with decades of proprietary enhancements over universal openness. Bloat allegations posit that Office's accumulation of features—exceeding 1,000 options in Word alone by the —overwhelms users who reportedly utilize only about 10% of capabilities, inflating installation sizes to over 3 GB for full suites and complicating interfaces. acknowledged this in developing the 2007 ribbon interface after eight years of studies involving 1.2 million user sessions, aiming to surface common tools while hiding rarely used ones. benchmarks show newer perpetual versions, like Office 2021 LTSC, exhibiting a 6% slowdown compared to Office 2016 on equivalent hardware, attributed partly to added security, cloud integration, and feature layers rather than core bloat. Critics argue this resource intensity disadvantages lower-end devices, though LTSC editions omit subscription-dependent elements to mitigate overhead. Business users and IT professionals have reported frustrations with Microsoft 365's frequent updates, which often introduce disruptive UI changes, feature relocations or removals that make applications unintuitive, and performance crashes, including issues with VBA macros. The "new Outlook" app has been particularly criticized for its inferiority, lacking key features from the classic version and complicating email management. OneDrive file syncing problems frequently lead to version conflicts or lost work. Excel faces limitations in data quality controls and add-in development, restricting its effectiveness for core business processes.

Pricing and Accessibility Critiques

Microsoft's transition from perpetual licenses to a predominant subscription model with has drawn criticism for escalating long-term costs to users, particularly those with infrequent needs or fixed budgets. Under the subscription framework, users pay recurring fees for access to applications like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, along with and updates, but this can exceed the expense of one-time perpetual purchases over several years; for instance, Personal costs $99.99 annually as of February 2025, potentially totaling over $500 in five years, compared to a one-time $149.99 for Home & Student 2021 perpetual license. Critics argue this model prioritizes Microsoft's revenue stability—generating predictable income streams—over user affordability, effectively requiring ongoing payments to maintain full functionality and security updates, unlike earlier perpetual versions that allowed indefinite use post-purchase without further fees. Perpetual licenses, such as Office 2024, remain available but face scrutiny for their limitations, including the absence of feature updates and eventual end-of-support for security patches, which can render them obsolete faster in a rapidly evolving software landscape. This option appeals to cost-conscious users avoiding subscriptions but is criticized for not aligning with Microsoft's push toward cloud-integrated ecosystems, where full compatibility and collaboration features increasingly demand a subscription. Enterprise pricing exacerbates these concerns, with plans like E3 at $54.75 per user monthly (annual commitment) and recent hikes—including a 5% premium for monthly billing on annual subscriptions starting April 1, 2025—adding financial pressure on businesses amid opaque add-ons like Copilot AI. Small organizations and individuals report the model as burdensome, with some opting for free alternatives like or to evade recurring expenses. Accessibility critiques highlight how high pricing erects economic barriers, disproportionately affecting users in developing countries and low-income regions where even discounted educational or nonprofit licenses—such as Education at reduced rates—remain unaffordable without subsidies. In nations like , full suites have historically been viewed as prohibitively expensive relative to local incomes, limiting productivity tool adoption and perpetuating a despite past initiatives like a $3 software bundle for qualifying governments in 2007. While web-based Online offers free basic access, its feature restrictions without a subscription undermine utility for advanced tasks, and mobile apps similarly gate premium capabilities behind paywalls, critiqued as insufficient for equitable access in resource-constrained environments. These dynamics favor entrenched users in wealthier markets, with alternatives gaining traction partly due to 's cost structure.

Impact and Legacy

Productivity and Economic Contributions

Microsoft Office applications have standardized digital workflows in offices worldwide, enabling efficient , manipulation, and that supplanted manual and paper-based methods. By the early 2000s, widespread adoption of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint facilitated quantifiable gains; for instance, automation in Excel reduced calculation times from hours to seconds for complex , as evidenced in studies from that era. A 2023 analysis of AI-enhanced Office tools, including Copilot integrated into , reported average increases of 40% for office tasks such as and content , based on controlled user trials. These tools' integration into daily operations has measurably shortened task completion cycles, with Microsoft-commissioned Forrester research indicating end-user time savings exceeding 70 hours annually per employee in organizations deploying suites. Economically, Microsoft Office underpins a substantial portion of the global , with its Productivity and Business Processes segment—including Office products—driving revenue growth through licensing and subscriptions. In 2022, Office-specific revenue reached $44.9 billion, reflecting a 13% year-over-year increase tied to expanded user bases and cloud migrations. As of 2025, holds approximately 30% of the global office software , serving over 3.7 million companies worldwide and more than 1 million in the United States alone, which correlates with broader GDP contributions via enhanced business efficiency. Independent economic modeling, such as Forrester's Total Economic Impact studies, attributes risk-adjusted benefits of up to $18.8 million over three years to mid-sized enterprises from Office-enabled , primarily through reduced operational costs and faster decision-making. This dominance has indirectly supported job creation in IT support, training, and software customization sectors, though gains are tempered by dependency on formats that can impose switching costs.

Cultural Influence and User Adoption

Microsoft Office's widespread adoption transformed it into the dominant productivity suite globally, with over 1.2 billion users reported by the early 2020s, reflecting its integration into professional, educational, and personal workflows. Initially released in 1990 bundling Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, the suite capitalized on Microsoft's Windows ecosystem, which held over 80% of the desktop operating market, facilitating rapid enterprise uptake as it became bundled with new PCs. By the , the shift to subscription models under 365 accelerated growth, surpassing 300 million paid subscribers by 2023 and reaching approximately 345 million by 2025, with commercial seats exceeding 400 million. This dominance yielded nearly 50% market share in and 85% in the U.S. as of 2021. The suite's ubiquity established it as the for document creation and collaboration, standardizing proprietary formats like .doc and .xls that permeated practices despite compatibility challenges with alternatives. Culturally, reshaped office dynamics by embedding tools like Excel for and PowerPoint for visual s into corporate norms, influencing processes and communication styles—evident in phenomena such as "spreadsheet culture" for and critiques of presentation overload. Its tools fostered a shift from manual to digital workflows, enhancing efficiency in report generation and data visualization, though this reinforced vendor dependency in global enterprises. In education and society, Office's adoption extended beyond workplaces, with widespread use in schools and universities standardizing ; by the 2000s, it was integral to curricula, producing generations proficient in its interfaces and perpetuating its market position through familiarity. This entrenched influence on productivity habits contributed to economic outputs, as businesses reported streamlined operations via integrated applications, though adoption metrics reveal variances, such as lower active usage in features like despite high deployment rates. Overall, Office's permeation into daily practices underscores its role in codifying modern knowledge work, with file extensions and application-specific jargon entering vernacular usage.

Competition, Alternatives, and Market Evolution

Microsoft Office has faced competition from various productivity suites since the 1990s, initially from bundled software like Lotus SmartSuite and Corel Office, which held notable shares in enterprise environments before Office's integration of features like solidified its lead. By the early 2000s, Office commanded over 90% of the desktop office suite market in many segments, driven by compatibility standards and bundling with Windows, though precise historical figures are estimates from analyst reports. Open-source alternatives emerged as challengers, with releasing in 2000 under the LGPL license, forking into in 2010 after Oracle's acquisition; , emphasizing privacy and no , is used by tens of millions but holds less than 0.1% global in office suites as of recent usage data. In the cloud era, Google Workspace (formerly G Suite) has emerged as the primary rival, leveraging real-time collaboration introduced with Google Docs in 2006 to capture cost-sensitive users in small businesses and education. As of February 2024, Google Workspace held approximately 44% of the global office software market, compared to Microsoft 365's 30%, though Microsoft dominates enterprise deployments with deeper integration into Active Directory and compliance tools. Other alternatives include WPS Office, popular in Asia for its Microsoft-like interface and low cost, and Apple iWork (Pages, Numbers, Keynote), which is free for macOS/iOS users but limited to Apple's ecosystem and lacks broad enterprise adoption, serving primarily individual or creative workflows without significant market share beyond Apple devices. Market evolution reflects a shift from desktop perpetual licenses to subscription-based SaaS models, accelerated by Office 365's launch in 2011 and competitors' free tiers, reducing barriers for alternatives but highlighting trade-offs in advanced features and file fidelity. Microsoft's from Commercial grew 14% year-over-year in fiscal 2025, underscoring resilience amid fragmentation, as open-source options like appeal to governments (e.g., deployments in and for ) but struggle with full Microsoft format compatibility, leading to persistent vendor preferences for Office in professional settings. Google Workspace's growth, reaching near parity in some metrics (48% vs. Microsoft's 46% globally by mid-2025), stems from seamless web access and AI enhancements like Gemini integration, yet Microsoft's ecosystem lock-in—via Exchange and Teams—sustains higher per-user despite alternatives eroding entry-level adoption.

References

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