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Microsoft Copilot pricing models cost more than the headline price. See every tier, the hidden base license fees, and how GoSearch compares on price and cross-tool coverage.

Microsoft Copilot Pricing: What It Really Costs in 2026

If you’re evaluating Microsoft Copilot for your organization, the headline price is only part of the story. Each Copilot tier requires a qualifying Microsoft 365 base license, and the combined per-seat cost is often two to three times higher than the add-on price alone.

This guide covers every Microsoft Copilot pricing tier, the base license requirements that affect your real budget, where Copilot has meaningful limitations for non-Microsoft tool stacks, and how GoSearch compares on price and capability.

What Is Microsoft Copilot?

Microsoft Copilot is an AI assistant embedded in Microsoft 365 applications, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Teams. It uses large language models from OpenAI and is grounded in your organization’s data through Microsoft Graph.

Copilot is not a single product. At least four different products carry the Copilot name. Confusing them is the most common source of budget surprises during procurement.

Microsoft Copilot Pricing Tiers (2026)

Free Copilot

Microsoft’s consumer-facing chat assistant, available at copilot.microsoft.com. No enterprise data grounding, no M365 app integration, no admin controls.

  • Cost: $0

Copilot Pro (Individual)

An add-on for individuals who already hold a Microsoft 365 Personal or Family subscription. Enables Copilot inside Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and OneNote for personal use. Not designed for enterprise deployment, multi-user management, or organizational data access.

  • Cost: $20/user/month

Microsoft 365 Copilot Business

The entry-level enterprise add-on. Enables Copilot across M365 apps with organizational data grounding through Microsoft Graph.

  • Cost: $21/user/month (annual commitment). Month-to-month billing is available at $25.20/user/month. This rate was reduced permanently from $30/user/month on December 1, 2025.
  • Base license required: Microsoft 365 Business Standard ($12.50/user/month) or Business Premium ($22/user/month).
  • True all-in cost: $33.50 to $43/user/month depending on base license tier.

Microsoft 365 Copilot Enterprise

The full enterprise tier. Connects to your organization’s data across M365 services, supports compliance requirements including GDPR, HIPAA, and ISO 27001, and works with a broader set of qualifying base licenses.

  • Cost: $30/user/month (annual commitment required)
  • Base license required: Microsoft 365 E3 ($36/user/month) or E5 ($57/user/month).
  • True all-in cost: $66 to $87/user/month, depending on base license tier.
  • Important planning note: Organizations on legacy Office 365 E1 or E3 plans must upgrade to Microsoft 365 E3 before Copilot can be added. That upgrade cost often exceeds the Copilot add-on itself.

Copilot Studio

A separate product for building custom AI agents beyond the standard M365 Copilot experience.

  • Cost: $200/month per tenant (starting price)

The Real Microsoft Copilot Cost: A 100-Seat Example

ScenarioBase LicenseCopilot Add-onTrue Monthly Cost
SMB (Business Standard)$12.50/user$21/user$33.50/user / $3,350/month
SMB (Business Premium)$22/user$21/user$43/user / $4,300/month
Enterprise (E3)$36/user$30/user$66/user / $6,600/month
Enterprise (E5)$57/user$30/user$87/user / $8,700/month

For a 100-seat organization at the E3 tier, that is $79,200 per year before implementation, training, or change management costs.

What Microsoft Copilot Does Well

For teams that primarily work inside Microsoft 365, Copilot delivers genuine productivity value. It can:

  • Summarize long email threads in Outlook
  • Draft meeting notes from Teams recordings
  • Accelerate first drafts in Word and PowerPoint
  • Analyze spreadsheet data in Excel using natural language
  • Surface relevant SharePoint documents during searches

Organizations that are deeply Microsoft-first, where Teams, Outlook, and SharePoint are the primary work surfaces, see the strongest return from Copilot.

Where Microsoft Copilot Has Limitations

It is built around the Microsoft ecosystem

Copilot’s data grounding comes from Microsoft Graph, which means it works with your M365 data by default. If your organization uses Slack, Jira, Confluence, GitHub, Salesforce, Notion, or Google Drive, Copilot either cannot access that data or requires custom connectors to bridge the gap.

Most enterprises run 50 to 200 or more SaaS tools. Copilot natively covers a fraction of them.

Third-party connectors exist, including Microsoft’s published connectors for Jira Cloud and Confluence. But each requires IT configuration, permissions mapping, and ongoing maintenance. Jira Server and Jira Data Center are not supported by the native connector. Attachments in Jira are not indexed. Coverage is not seamless across the stack.

Adoption has plateaued for many organizations

Independent analysis indicates that only about 6% of organizations that piloted Copilot moved to larger-scale deployment. As of early 2026, roughly 15 million users held active licenses out of 450 million total M365 subscribers, a 3.3% conversion rate. The typical pattern: licenses get approved, usage spikes in week one, and then plateaus by month three as employees continue working across tools Copilot cannot see.

It assists individual tasks, not cross-system workflows

Copilot is a personal productivity layer. It helps an individual draft a document or summarize a meeting. It does not index knowledge across your full enterprise, connect a sales rep’s question to a Slack thread from Q3, or reason across tools to answer “what is the current status of the Acme project?” Those outcomes require enterprise search architecture, not a productivity assistant.

Agentic capabilities are scoped to Microsoft

Copilot continues to add agentic features, but those agents operate primarily within the Microsoft ecosystem. True agentic enterprise search, taking an action across Jira, Slack, GitHub, and your internal knowledge base from a single natural language prompt, is not what Copilot is designed to do.

GoSearch Pricing at a Glance

GoSearch offers three plans with no prerequisite license stack required.

PlanPriceBest For
Free$0Small teams evaluating agentic search
Pro$20/user/monthGrowing teams that need cross-tool search across their full stack
EnterpriseFrom $25/user/monthOrganizations with advanced security, compliance, and scale requirements

At the Pro tier, a 100-seat team pays $2,000/month. The equivalent M365 E3 + Copilot Enterprise stack costs $6,600/month for the same 100 seats. That difference compounds significantly at enterprise scale.

Microsoft Copilot vs. GoSearch: Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureMicrosoft 365 Copilot (Enterprise)GoSearch
Starting price$30/user/month add-on (M365 base license also required)Free plan available; Pro at $20/user/month; Enterprise from $25/user/month
True all-in cost$66 to $87/user/month (E3/E5 + Copilot)$20 to $25/user/month, no prerequisite license stack
Annual commitment requiredYesFlexible
Base license prerequisiteM365 E3 or E5 requiredNone
Ecosystem coverageMicrosoft 365 apps primarily100+ enterprise connectors including Google Workspace, Slack, Jira, GitHub, Confluence, Salesforce, and Notion
Cross-tool searchLimited; native connectors for select tools, requires IT configurationFederated real-time search across your full stack
Permissions-aware retrievalWithin M365 permissions modelYes, across all connected tools
Search architectureMicrosoft Graph-groundedFederated search + GraphRAG, real-time indexing
Agentic capabilitiesM365-scoped agentsAgentic enterprise search across tools from a single query
MCP-based connectorsNoYes
Google Workspace supportLimitedFull support
Jira/Confluence supportJira Cloud only; Server and Data Center not supportedFull support
Slack supportNot natively groundedYes
Setup complexityRequires base license upgrade, admin configuration, connector setup per toolFast time-to-value; responsive support team
SecurityGDPR, HIPAA, ISO 27001SOC 2 Type II, zero data retention, hybrid architecture
Ideal forM365-native organizations focused on personal productivity tasksTeams that need AI search across their full enterprise stack
Note: The Best 4 Microsoft Copilot Alternatives for Enterprise Teams in 2026.

Why You Should Look at GoSearch

GoSearch is built to solve the problem Copilot does not fully address: most enterprise knowledge is not stored in Microsoft.

For engineering, product, and sales teams, critical context lives across Jira, GitHub, Slack, Confluence, Google Drive, Salesforce, and other tools. GoSearch connects to all of them through an MCP-native architecture that maintains real-time, permissions-aware indexing across your full stack.

One search bar for everything

GoSearch does not require standardizing on a single vendor. Whether your organization runs Google Workspace, Slack, Jira, and Confluence, or a hybrid of Microsoft and non-Microsoft tools, GoSearch indexes across all of them. Employees search once and get results from everywhere.

Agentic, not just assistive

GoSearch is not a productivity assistant layered onto existing apps. It is built to reason across systems, surface context, connect signals, and take actions across tools from a single natural language prompt. That is the difference between “summarize this document” and “show me what the team decided on the Acme integration and open a Jira ticket to follow up.”

Permissions-aware retrieval across every tool

GoSearch only surfaces content each user is authorized to see, across every connected system, not just within a single vendor’s permissions model. Engineers do not see HR docs. Sales reps do not see source code. Governance requirements are enforced consistently across the entire stack.

Security built for enterprise requirements

GoSearch is SOC 2 Type II certified with zero data retention and a hybrid architecture that keeps sensitive data where it belongs. For IT and security teams with strict compliance requirements, this is a prerequisite, not a feature.

Connectors that work out of the box

GoSearch connector setup is consistently faster than alternatives. The support team is responsive and technically engaged, not a slow-moving ticket queue. Organizations report significantly faster time-to-value because the connector experience does not require months of IT overhead.

No prerequisite license stack

Microsoft Copilot Enterprise costs $30/user/month on top of an E3 or E5 license you may need to upgrade into first. GoSearch has no underlying license requirement. The investment goes directly into the search platform, and the value applies across every tool your team already uses.

Summary

Microsoft Copilot is a strong fit for organizations whose primary work surfaces are Teams, Outlook, and SharePoint. At the right company, it delivers real productivity gains for individual tasks inside the Microsoft ecosystem.

If your team spans Slack, Jira, GitHub, Confluence, Google Drive, or any significant non-Microsoft tool stack, the per-seat cost climbs fast and the coverage gaps become a daily friction point. Purpose-built enterprise search is often a more direct path to the outcome you are actually after: helping every employee find what they need, regardless of where it lives.

GoSearch was built specifically for that problem. Start free, or talk to the team about what full-stack enterprise search looks like for your organization.

Talk to the GoSearch team

Schedule a demo

Frequently Asked Questions About Microsoft Copilot Pricing

What is Microsoft Copilot’s true cost per user?

The add-on is $21/user/month (Business) or $30/user/month (Enterprise). Each user also needs a qualifying M365 base license. All-in costs typically run $33.50 to $87/user/month depending on your base license tier.

Does Microsoft Copilot require an annual commitment?

The Business tier ($21/user/month) is available month-to-month at $25.20/user/month. The Enterprise tier ($30/user/month) requires an annual commitment.

Can Microsoft Copilot search Slack, Jira, or Confluence?

Not natively. Copilot’s data grounding covers M365 services through Microsoft Graph. Third-party connectors exist for some tools, but Jira Server and Data Center are not supported, and each connector requires IT setup. Jira attachments are not indexed.

How much does GoSearch cost?

GoSearch offers a Free plan, a Pro plan at $20/user/month, and an Enterprise plan starting at $25/user/month. No Microsoft or Google base license is required. Learn more at gosearch.ai/sales.

How does GoSearch differ from Microsoft Copilot?

Teams running mixed stacks that span Google, Slack, Jira, and Salesforce alongside Microsoft tools. Engineering and product organizations that need cross-system context. Organizations that have already piloted Copilot and found adoption plateauing because employees cannot find information that lives outside M365.

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Brandon Most

Brandon Most

Brandon Most is Head of Marketing at GoLinks, GoSearch, and GoProfiles, where he helps enterprise teams navigate the AI landscape and deploy tools that actually improve how work gets done. With nearly 20 years of SaaS marketing experience, he connects buyers with solutions that deliver measurable impact — and advises the boards and executive teams of several venture-backed startups.

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