If your organization is running AI agents, the answer is probably yes.
Microsoft 365 E7, also called the Frontier Suite, became available on May 1, 2026 at $99/user/month on an annual commitment. It bundles four products into one SKU: Microsoft 365 E5, Microsoft 365 Copilot, the Microsoft Entra ID Suite, and Microsoft Agent 365. Buy them separately and you're looking at roughly $117/user/month. The bundle saves you about $18 per user, or around 15%, before any CSP promotions apply.
The first three components won't surprise anyone who's been watching Microsoft licensing. E5 is the existing enterprise security and productivity foundation. Copilot is the AI assistant most organizations have already been pricing as a standalone add-on since 2024. Entra ID Suite adds the deeper identity governance features - Privileged Identity Management, Identity Protection, lifecycle workflows - that E3/E5 customers typically bolt on separately.
Agent 365 is the piece most IT teams haven't budgeted for yet. That's the one worth paying attention to.
Why Agent 365 Changes the Equation
AI agents are already in production at most large organizations, whether IT knows about it or not. IDC projects 1.3 billion AI agents in use by 2028, and 80% of the Fortune 500 are already running Microsoft's agentic capabilities. The problem isn't adoption - it's governance. Agents that spin up without proper oversight become a shadow-IT problem fast: they access data, generate outputs, and operate under policies nobody set.
Agent 365 gives each AI agent an identity in Entra, tracks what it accesses, and enforces your existing compliance and security policies on it the same way those policies apply to people. If you're running Copilot Studio workflows, Foundry automations, or any autonomous process that touches sensitive data, this is the control plane you need. Without it, you're essentially running agents with no audit trail.
You can buy Agent 365 as a standalone for $15/user/month. But if you're already on E5 with Copilot, you're spending $117/user combined - at which point E7 at $99 just makes more sense.
The Promotions
Through December 31, 2026, Microsoft is offering CSP customers introductory discounts on E7:
- 10% off with 10+ seats on an annual term (~$89.10/user/month)
- 15% off with 100+ seats on an annual term (~$84.15/user/month)
- 15% off with 300+ seats on a three-year term (~$84.15/user/month)
At 100+ seats with the 15% promo, you're paying about $84/user instead of the $117 you'd pay stitching it together yourself. For a 150-user org, that's roughly $59,000 in annual savings compared to separate licenses.
Who Should Skip It
E7 isn't for everyone. If you're on Business Premium and only want Copilot, the price jump doesn't work out. If Entra ID P1 covers your identity needs and you have no agents in production or on the roadmap, you're paying for governance tooling you won't use. The trap we see most often is organizations upgrading to E7 for Copilot alone, then leaving Agent 365 dormant. If that's your plan, stay on E5 plus standalone Copilot and revisit at renewal.
But if agents are already running in your environment - or they will be in the next 12 months - E7 is the licensing structure built for it. The governance capability isn't a nice-to-have at that point. It's the thing that keeps autonomous AI from becoming your next compliance problem.
Find out more in this in-depth breakdown of M365 E7.

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