Microsoft 365 Business Premium vs E3

Microsoft 365 Business Premium vs. E3: Which Plan Is Right for Your Business?

Microsoft 365 Business Premium vs. E3: Which Plan Is Right for Your Business?

Microsoft 365 Business Premium and Microsoft 365 E3 are closer than most comparisons suggest. Both cover the full Office app suite, Teams, Exchange, OneDrive, Intune, and Entra ID P1. But at nearly double the price of Business Premium, E3 needs to earn that gap — and for a lot of businesses, it simply does not. This guide lays out exactly what separates the two plans, when upgrading to E3 makes sense, and when Business Premium is the smarter choice.

The Short Answer

Business Premium is the right plan for most businesses under 300 users. E3 earns its higher price when you hit the 300-user ceiling, need larger mailboxes with unlimited archiving, require Windows Enterprise licensing, or have compliance obligations that demand litigation hold and eDiscovery. For the majority of small and mid-size businesses, Business Premium already covers the security and device management stack without the enterprise price tag.

Pricing at a Glance

⚠️ July 2026 pricing update: Microsoft 365 E3 increased from $36 to $39 per user per month on July 1, 2026. Business Premium held at $22. The gap between the two plans narrowed slightly, making Business Premium an even stronger value for organizations that do not need enterprise-scale features.
Business Premium
$22.00
per user / month (annual)
No change — price held at $22
Microsoft 365 E3
$39.00
per user / month (annual)
Increased from $36 on July 1, 2026

The difference is $17 per user per month. For a 50-person team, that is $10,200 per year. That number should drive the conversation: what does E3 add that Business Premium does not, and is it worth $17 per user to your organization?


What Both Plans Include

The overlap between Business Premium and E3 is more substantial than most people realize. Before getting to the differences, it is worth laying out what you get from both:

  • Full desktop Office apps — Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, OneNote, and more
  • Exchange Online — business email with a custom domain
  • Microsoft Teams — chat, video, file sharing, and meeting recordings
  • OneDrive for Business — 1 TB of cloud storage per user
  • SharePoint Online — document libraries and collaboration sites
  • Microsoft Intune Plan 1 — device enrollment, MDM, MAM, and Windows Autopilot
  • Microsoft Entra ID P1 — conditional access, MFA policies, and self-service password reset
  • Exchange Online Protection — anti-spam and anti-malware filtering
  • Basic Microsoft Purview — sensitivity labels and core data loss prevention

For most day-to-day security and device management needs, this shared foundation is more than adequate. The case for E3 is built almost entirely on what sits above this baseline.


What E3 Adds Over Business Premium

No User Cap

Business Premium is capped at 300 users. This is a hard limit across all Business-family plans, not a soft guideline. If your organization reaches user 301, you have to move to an Enterprise plan. Microsoft 365 E3 has no user cap, which is the most straightforward reason to upgrade as a business grows past that ceiling.

Larger Mailboxes and Unlimited Archiving

Business Premium includes a 50 GB primary mailbox and a 50 GB archive mailbox per user. E3 includes Exchange Online Plan 2, which raises the primary mailbox to 100 GB and provides an auto-expanding archive with no practical storage ceiling. For businesses that retain large volumes of email for regulatory or legal reasons, this difference is significant. For businesses that manage mailbox size through reasonable retention policies, it often is not.

Windows 11 Enterprise Licensing

E3 includes a Windows 11 Enterprise E3 license per user. This enables features like Windows Autopatch (automated patch management at scale), DirectAccess, AppLocker, and BranchCache — tools primarily relevant to larger organizations managing a significant fleet of Windows devices centrally. Business Premium does not include Windows Enterprise; devices need to be licensed separately through OEM or volume licensing.

Advanced Compliance: Litigation Hold and eDiscovery

This is one of the clearest functional differences between the two plans. E3 includes litigation hold through Exchange Online Plan 2, which lets you preserve all mailbox content for a specific user indefinitely regardless of whether they delete it — a requirement in many legal proceedings and regulatory audits. E3 also includes eDiscovery Standard through Microsoft Purview, which allows you to search across Exchange, Teams, SharePoint, and OneDrive and export content for legal review.

Business Premium does not include litigation hold or eDiscovery. If your business operates in an industry where legal holds are routine — law firms, financial services, healthcare — or if you have been through litigation that required email discovery, this distinction matters considerably.

Expanded Microsoft Purview Compliance Tools

E3 includes a broader set of Microsoft Purview tools for data governance: more advanced data loss prevention policies that cover endpoint devices (not just Exchange and SharePoint), communication compliance auditing, and more granular retention and records management. For businesses with formal compliance programs or specific regulatory obligations, these tools provide controls that Business Premium does not.

A nuance worth knowing: E3 does not include Microsoft Defender for Business — the SMB-oriented endpoint protection tool bundled in Business Premium. Instead, E3 includes Microsoft Defender for Endpoint Plan 1, which is the lighter enterprise variant. For most SMBs, Defender for Business in Premium is actually the more capable security tool for their environment. If you move from Business Premium to E3 and need equivalent endpoint protection, you may need to add Defender for Endpoint Plan 2 separately.

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureBusiness PremiumMicrosoft 365 E3
Price (annual commitment)$22.00/user/mo$39.00/user/mo
Full desktop Office apps✓ Yes✓ Yes
Exchange Online email✓ Yes✓ Yes
Primary mailbox size50 GB100 GB
Email archive50 GBUnlimited
Microsoft Teams✓ Yes✓ Yes
OneDrive storage1 TB/user1 TB/user
SharePoint Online✓ Yes✓ Yes
Microsoft Intune Plan 1 (MDM/MAM)✓ Yes✓ Yes
Microsoft Entra ID P1 (conditional access)✓ Yes✓ Yes
Microsoft Defender for Business (endpoint)✓ Yes✗ No
Defender for Office 365 Plan 1✓ Yes✓ Yes (from July 2026)
Windows 11 Enterprise licensing✗ No✓ Yes
Litigation hold✗ No✓ Yes
eDiscovery Standard✗ No✓ Yes
Endpoint DLP (beyond Exchange/SharePoint)✗ No✓ Yes
Maximum users300Unlimited
⚠ E3 pricing reflects the July 1, 2026 increase from $36 to $39/user/month.

When Business Premium Is the Right Choice

For the majority of small and mid-size businesses in Ventura County and greater Los Angeles — typically 10 to 200 users — Business Premium hits a level of security and management capability that E3 does not meaningfully improve on for their day-to-day needs.

Business Premium makes sense when:

  • You have fewer than 300 users and do not expect to exceed that in the near term
  • Your mailboxes are manageable in size and you do not have litigation hold requirements
  • You want strong endpoint security included, without paying extra for it — Defender for Business in Business Premium is purpose-built for SMBs and often more practical than the enterprise Defender stack
  • You do not need Windows Enterprise licensing — your devices are already licensed through OEM or you use a mix of Windows and Mac
  • Your compliance needs are covered by basic DLP, sensitivity labels, and standard retention policies
  • You want a simpler admin experience — Business Premium’s admin center is designed for lean IT teams, not dedicated enterprise IT departments

When E3 Is the Right Choice

E3 earns its price tag in specific, well-defined scenarios. It is worth the jump when:

  • You have more than 300 users, or are actively growing toward that threshold and want to avoid a disruptive mid-year migration
  • You operate in a regulated industry where litigation hold and eDiscovery are not optional — legal, financial services, healthcare, and government contractors frequently fall into this category
  • Your legal or compliance team has flagged specific requirements around email preservation, data export, or audit logging that Business Premium cannot satisfy
  • You need Windows 11 Enterprise features — particularly Windows Autopatch for automated patch management at scale, or AppLocker for application control
  • You have mailboxes that consistently hit storage limits and need both 100 GB primary mailboxes and unlimited archiving
  • You have a dedicated IT team with the capacity to manage a more complex enterprise licensing and compliance environment
Worth knowing if you are growing: Microsoft allows you to mix Business and Enterprise plans in the same tenant. A growing organization can keep most users on Business Premium and assign E3 only to the users who genuinely need litigation hold, eDiscovery, or Windows Enterprise. This hybrid approach is commonly used and avoids paying the E3 premium across the board.

The Security Comparison Is Not What You Would Expect

This is the part of the comparison that surprises most people. The natural assumption is that E3, being an enterprise plan, includes better security than Business Premium. The reality is more nuanced.

Business Premium was built specifically for SMBs and includes Microsoft Defender for Business — a purpose-designed endpoint protection platform that provides next-generation antivirus, behavioral detection, and automated incident response tuned for organizations without a dedicated security operations team. E3 does not include Defender for Business. It includes Defender for Endpoint Plan 1, which is a lighter enterprise starting point that requires more configuration and assumes a more experienced IT or security team behind it.

If you move from Business Premium to E3 and want to maintain equivalent endpoint protection depth, you will likely need to add Defender for Endpoint Plan 2 as a separate add-on, which adds cost and complexity.

For most small and mid-sized businesses, Business Premium’s security stack — Defender for Business, Defender for Office 365 Plan 1, Intune, and Entra ID P1 — is more than what E3 delivers out of the box at the enterprise level.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is Microsoft 365 E3 better than Business Premium?
It depends on what “better” means for your organization. E3 adds no user cap, larger mailboxes, unlimited archiving, Windows Enterprise, and enterprise compliance tools. Business Premium includes stronger out-of-the-box endpoint security through Defender for Business, which E3 does not bundle. For most businesses under 300 users without formal compliance obligations, Business Premium is the more practical and cost-effective plan.
What does E3 include that Business Premium does not?
The meaningful additions in E3 are: no 300-user cap, 100 GB primary mailboxes with unlimited archiving, Windows 11 Enterprise E3 licensing, litigation hold, eDiscovery Standard, and more advanced Microsoft Purview compliance tools including endpoint DLP. Everything else — Office apps, Teams, Intune, Entra ID P1, SharePoint, OneDrive — is available in both plans.
Does E3 include Microsoft Defender for Business?
No. E3 includes Microsoft Defender for Endpoint Plan 1, not Defender for Business. Defender for Business, which is included in Business Premium, is a purpose-built SMB security product with more automated threat response and simpler configuration. For businesses moving from Business Premium to E3, maintaining equivalent endpoint protection may require adding Defender for Endpoint Plan 2 separately.
What is litigation hold, and do I need it?
Litigation hold is a feature in Exchange Online Plan 2 (included with E3) that preserves all mailbox content for a specific user — including deleted items — for as long as needed, regardless of retention policies or user actions. It is typically required when an organization is involved in or anticipates legal proceedings, or when regulators require demonstrable email preservation. If your industry or legal counsel has flagged this requirement, it is a clear reason to choose E3 over Business Premium.
Can I mix Business Premium and E3 licenses in the same tenant?
Yes. Microsoft allows you to combine Business and Enterprise plans within the same account. A common approach is to keep most users on Business Premium and assign E3 only to users in legal, HR, finance, or compliance roles who specifically need litigation hold, eDiscovery, or Windows Enterprise. This hybrid model avoids paying the E3 premium across the entire organization.
What happens to my Business Premium licenses if I grow past 300 users?
You will need to migrate to an Enterprise plan for any users above 300. Existing Business Premium licenses do not automatically convert, and Microsoft does not allow Business plans to exceed the 300-seat combined limit. It is worth planning for this transition before you reach the ceiling, as mid-year migrations can be disruptive and may affect billing.
How does E3 pricing compare to Business Premium in 2026?
After the July 1, 2026 pricing update, Microsoft 365 E3 costs $39 per user per month on an annual commitment. Business Premium costs $22 per user per month and did not change. The gap is $17 per user per month, or $204 per user per year. For a 50-person team, choosing E3 over Business Premium costs an additional $10,200 per year.

The Bottom Line

For most businesses in the Conejo Valley and greater Los Angeles area, Business Premium is the right plan — and not just because it costs less. It includes better endpoint security out of the box than E3, covers device management, identity controls, and email threat protection, and does all of this through an admin experience designed for lean IT teams.

E3 earns its price when the requirements are genuinely enterprise: more than 300 users, litigation hold, eDiscovery, Windows Enterprise, or unlimited mailbox archiving. Those are real requirements in specific industries and at specific stages of growth. Outside of those situations, paying $17 more per user per month for E3 is spending on capabilities that will go largely unused.

If you are on Business Premium and wondering whether E3 makes sense for your situation, or if you are setting up Microsoft 365 for the first time and want to make sure you land on the right plan, Urban IT can walk you through it. We help businesses across Ventura County and greater Los Angeles get Microsoft 365 structured correctly — the right plan for the right users, without overpaying. Talk to Urban IT →

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