Microsoft 365 E7 bundle is rolling out as Microsoft pushes a new premium tier for enterprise users at $99 per user per month, combining its core workplace apps with AI, security and identity tools.
According to the source content, the package includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Teams, along with Microsoft 365 Copilot, Agent 365, and additional security and access features. The move signals Microsoft’s latest effort to turn AI features into a higher-value business subscription.
The launch also adds attention to Copilot Cowork, a new AI-supported feature described as capable of handling multi-step tasks while staying within Microsoft 365 security boundaries and checking with users before making changes. Frontier is Microsoft’s early-access space for new Copilot experiences, which fits the rollout approach described in the source content.
Microsoft 365 E7 bundle adds AI tools and enterprise controls
The reported bundle stands out for combining productivity software with AI assistance and management features in a single package. That includes Copilot for work tasks and Agent 365 for overseeing AI agents, while identity and compliance tools add more control for enterprise customers.
Microsoft says Copilot for work connects AI with business data and Microsoft 365 apps, helping users write, analyse, summarise, and manage tasks across everyday tools. That broader product direction helps explain why the new bundle focuses on both productivity and governance.
The source content says Microsoft 365 E7 will launch on May 1, 2026. It also says Copilot Cowork will begin rolling out to Frontier participants this month, with wider availability expected in late March. Frontier materials from Microsoft describe the program as early access for experimental Copilot features before broader release.
For businesses already weighing AI spending, the new bundle raises the question of whether integrated AI tools, identity controls and security features justify the higher monthly price.
Read: Microsoft Advises Users to Remove the Faulty Windows 11 January Update
At the same time, the announcement shows Microsoft is moving beyond simple AI assistants and toward tools that can support more autonomous workplace tasks inside existing software environments.
That strategy could appeal to companies that want stronger AI features without stepping outside the Microsoft ecosystem.