The short version: Starting July 1, 2026, Microsoft makes two permanent plans the default AI-included offer for small businesses with up to 300 seats. Microsoft 365 Business Standard with Copilot at $23.50 per user per month and Microsoft 365 Business Premium with Copilot at $32 per user per month replace the old add-on model. Copilot is no longer a separate purchase you agonize over each renewal. This matters if your team runs on Microsoft 365, and it matters today.
What Is Changing on July 1, 2026 for Microsoft 365 Copilot Small Business Plans?
For the past two years, Microsoft Copilot was an optional layer bolted on top of your existing Microsoft 365 subscription. The price was steep at $30 per user per month on top of the base plan, the value proposition was murky for many small teams, and most small business owners passed.
That model ends tomorrow.
Microsoft is introducing two permanent small-business SKUs, aimed at organizations with one to 300 users on annual billing. Here is what they cost:
- Microsoft 365 Business Standard with Copilot: $23.50 per user per month (annual commitment)
- Microsoft 365 Business Premium with Copilot: $32 per user per month (annual commitment)
The new bundled pricing folds Copilot into the subscription at a meaningful discount, with no separate line item to justify at each billing cycle. For the math-minded: if you were previously on Business Standard at roughly $12.50 per user and adding Copilot at $30, you were paying $42.50 per seat. The bundled plan cuts that to $23.50, a reduction of more than 44 percent on the all-in cost.
If your team prefers to stay on an existing plan and simply add Copilot, Microsoft has also permanently reduced the standalone Copilot Business add-on to $21 per user per month, a roughly 30 percent cut from the enterprise rate. A 15 percent promotional discount brings that to approximately $18 per user per month through December 31, 2026, for organizations with one to 300 users on an annual commitment.
Is Microsoft 365 Copilot Actually Worth It for Small Businesses Now?
That is the right question to ask, not just “is this affordable.”
Copilot is embedded across Word, Excel, Outlook, Teams, and PowerPoint. The practical use cases for a small business team are real: drafting meeting summaries in Teams, generating first drafts of proposals in Word, analyzing a spreadsheet in Excel without writing a single formula, and responding to email threads faster with Outlook suggestions.
None of those replace your judgment. All of them reclaim time.
That said, Copilot’s value depends heavily on how your team works. If your people live in Microsoft 365 throughout the workday, the ROI case is straightforward. If your operation runs primarily on Google Workspace, Notion, or industry-specific software, this particular bundle is not your priority.
A useful data point: research published earlier this month found that 87 percent of small business owners now use AI tools daily, but only one in five feel confident enough in their AI use to see meaningful revenue gains. The gap is not access; it is integration. Tools that live inside your existing workflow tend to get used. Add-ons that require a separate login, a different tab, and a context switch rarely do.
What Happens to Teams Already on Microsoft 365 Without Copilot?
Nothing changes automatically. If you are on Microsoft 365 Business Standard or Business Premium without Copilot, your subscription continues unchanged until your next renewal.
At that point, you have three paths:
- Upgrade to the new bundled plan at renewal.
- Add the standalone Copilot Business add-on at $21 per user per month, or $18 with the December 2026 promotional rate.
- Stay on your current plan and revisit the decision at the next cycle.
There is no forced migration. Microsoft is adding options, not removing them.
One practical note: if you have been curious about Copilot but waiting for a better entry point, the standalone add-on discount running through December 31 is a reasonable window to pilot it across a small subset of your team before committing to a full plan upgrade.
The Non-Obvious Shift: Microsoft Just Raised the Stakes on Itself
Here is what most coverage of this announcement will miss.
When AI is an optional add-on, users can ignore it forever. No harm, no foul. When it is bundled into the core subscription, it has to earn its seat at every renewal cycle. Microsoft just made itself accountable to every small business owner who signs up in a way the old add-on model never required.
That accountability pressure is quietly good for you as a customer. It means Microsoft now has a financial incentive, not just a marketing one, to keep improving Copilot fast enough that subscribers feel they would actually miss it if it disappeared. That kind of pressure tends to produce better software faster.
It also fits a clear directional signal. Microsoft Scout, the always-on AI agent that automates across Teams, Outlook, and SharePoint, was announced last month as AI-as-infrastructure. This pricing shift is the commercial layer on top of that bet. Within two to three years, asking whether your productivity suite includes AI will feel like asking whether it includes spell check. The question is being retired before most people realize it.
How Does This Compare to Google Workspace with Gemini?
The closest competitor is Google Workspace with Gemini, which independent benchmarks credit with roughly a 20 percent productivity lift for SMBs in embedded use cases. Google’s Business Standard with Gemini runs approximately $14 per user per month, making it cheaper per seat.
The real comparison is not price; it is workflow fit. Microsoft 365 wins in organizations built around Word, Excel, and Outlook. Google Workspace wins in teams running on Docs, Sheets, and Gmail. The AI layer embedded in both platforms is now mature enough that the one you are already on is probably the best next move, rather than switching ecosystems to chase features.
What Should Small Business Owners Do Right Now?
A short checklist, because the window is short:
- Confirm which Microsoft 365 plan you are currently on and when your annual renewal falls.
- Count your seats. Both bundled plans apply to one to 300 users.
- If you want a lower-risk pilot, add the standalone Copilot add-on at $18 per user per month for two to three users through December 2026 before committing to a full upgrade.
- Pick one use case to test first: meeting summaries in Teams, email drafts in Outlook, or formula suggestions in Excel. A narrow scope produces honest ROI signals faster than a broad rollout does.
The worst outcome is letting this pricing shift go by unexamined and defaulting to the same inaction that made sense when Copilot cost $30 extra, without checking whether the tool has improved enough to change the math.
It has. The price just caught up with that reality.
FAQ: Microsoft 365 Copilot for Small Business
Is Copilot now automatically included in all Microsoft 365 Business plans?
No. Copilot is included in two new permanent SKUs: Microsoft 365 Business Standard with Copilot and Microsoft 365 Business Premium with Copilot. Existing plans without Copilot remain available; upgrading is your choice, not automatic.
How much does Microsoft 365 Business Standard with Copilot cost?
The permanent pricing starting July 1, 2026, is $23.50 per user per month on an annual commitment, for teams of one to 300 seats.
Can I add Copilot to my current Microsoft 365 plan without switching?
Yes. The standalone Copilot Business add-on is now permanently $21 per user per month, with a 15 percent promotional discount bringing it to approximately $18 per user per month through December 31, 2026, for SMBs on annual billing.
What is the most practical way to get real value from Copilot as a small business owner?
Start with one workflow, not the whole tool. Meeting summaries in Teams and first-draft emails in Outlook are the two highest-ROI starting points because they reclaim time on tasks that drain your day without requiring the creative judgment that only you can supply.
If Microsoft included Copilot in your plan tomorrow at no extra cost, which workflow would you test first?
