10 min read
Microsoft Extended Service Terms and Renewal Cost Risk
A missed Microsoft 365 renewal can now increase your licensing cost by roughly 23%. That change took effect on May 4, 2026, when Microsoft removed...
A missed Microsoft 365 renewal can now increase your licensing cost by roughly 23%.
That change took effect on May 4, 2026, when Microsoft removed the free grace period that previously allowed subscriptions to continue running after expiration.
Now, if a subscription is not renewed on time, there are only two outcomes. Services stop immediately, or the subscription continues at a higher monthly rate under Extended Service Terms.
That higher rate is not tied to usage changes, security upgrades, or additional features. It is the cost of keeping the service active after the renewal window has passed.
Extended Service Terms introduce that cost layer and add a third decision point at renewal.
Understanding how EST works is now part of managing Microsoft 365 licensing.
In this episode of the Demystifying Microsoft podcast, Nathan Taylor and Austin Kelly discuss how Extended Service Terms change what happens at the end of a Microsoft 365 subscription.
Extended Service Terms are a paid month-to-month extension that begins when a Microsoft 365 subscription reaches the end of its term and is not renewed.
Historically, when a subscription expired, there was little immediate impact. Most environments entered a 30-day grace period where services continued without interruption and without additional cost. After that, the subscription moved into a disabled state before eventual deletion.
That model no longer exists.
Today, there are three explicit choices at the end of a subscription term:
This replaces the previous model where a subscription could drift into a free grace period without a formal decision.
From Microsoft’s perspective, this removes ambiguity. If a service is still being used, it is now billed accordingly.
EST pricing is based on the standard monthly rate, plus a 3% uplift.
In most environments, this results in a cost that is roughly 23% higher than annual pricing.
Here is how the pricing compares across common licensing models:
|
Billing Term |
Premium Over Annual Pricing |
|
Annual commit, paid upfront |
Baseline |
|
Annual commit, paid monthly |
~5% premium |
|
Monthly commit |
~20% premium |
|
Extended Service Terms |
~23% premium |
EST is prorated, which means you are only billed for the days you remain in that state.
However, any discounted or promotional pricing does not carry over. Once a subscription enters EST, billing resets to the standard rate at the higher monthly premium.
While in EST, services remain active, but administrative control is limited.
You cannot:
You can only:
EST behaves like a holding pattern. It keeps services running, but it does not allow changes.
EST exists for situations where a renewal decision cannot be finalized before expiration.
Finance approval delays are one example. A renewal may be planned, but procurement or budget cycles prevent a timely decision. EST allows services to continue while those approvals are completed.
Leadership changes create similar scenarios. If responsibility for licensing decisions is unclear or temporarily paused, EST can prevent immediate disruption.
There are also cases where communication gaps delay action. When stakeholders or customers do not respond in time, EST can act as a short-term buffer without forcing a long-term commitment.
Finally, EST can help in certain licensing transition scenarios. For example, moving between SKUs that do not have a direct upgrade path may require a short overlap. EST can provide that flexibility without locking into another full term.
EST works when it is used deliberately as a bridge, not when it appears by default.
Most EST transitions will not be intentional.
If no action is taken before expiration and auto-renew is turned off, subscriptions can move into EST automatically.
This becomes more difficult to track as environments grow. Multiple subscriptions, different renewal dates, and separate billing structures increase the likelihood that something gets missed.
Know your renewal dates, start renewal discussions early, and understand how your licensing is managed across partners or billing platforms.
Without that visibility, EST often appears after the fact.
When flexibility is needed, the decision usually comes down to EST versus moving to monthly licensing ahead of time.
Monthly licensing typically carries a 20% premium. EST carries roughly 23%. The difference in cost is minimal, but the difference in control is not.
Monthly licensing allows full control over the environment. Seats can be added or removed, SKUs can be changed, and adjustments can be made at any time.
EST does not allow those changes. It simply keeps the existing state active at a higher cost.
If flexibility is part of the plan, moving to monthly licensing before expiration is usually the cleaner option.
EST makes more sense when a decision was expected but did not happen, and a short-term bridge is needed without committing to a new term.
|
Date |
Milestone |
|
November 2025 |
EST introduced in testing environments |
|
February 2026 |
EST available in production for partners |
|
May 4, 2026 |
Free grace period removed and EST enforcement begins |
EST is a paid month-to-month extension that allows Microsoft 365 services to continue after a subscription expires without renewal.
The subscription will either be canceled at expiration or continue under Extended Service Terms at a higher monthly rate.
Yes. If auto-renew is turned off and no action is taken before the expiration date, eligible subscriptions can transition into EST and begin billing at the higher rate.
EST is billed at the standard monthly rate plus a 3% uplift. If no monthly pricing exists, the effective cost can be significantly higher than annual pricing.
No. You cannot add or remove seats, change SKUs, or modify licensing while in EST.
Yes. You can exist EST by renewing to a new term, upgrading to a different license, or cancelling the subscription.
Extended Service Terms are now part of the renewal process.
The change is not in how licenses are used. It is in how expiration is handled.
A missed renewal date no longer provides a buffer.
If your environment has upcoming renewals, review subscription timing, align internal approvals, and decide how each renewal should be handled before the deadline.
If you want help reviewing your licensing or planning ahead of renewal, connect with the Sourcepass Center of Excellence for Microsoft.
Subscribe to the Demystifying Microsoft podcast for more direct breakdowns of Microsoft licensing, security, and platform changes.
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