Microsoft is testing an ad-supported Office for Windows in select markets. The free version lacks key features and forces cloud storage on OneDrive.
Microsoft is testing a free, ad-supported version of Office for Windows. Users can access Word, Excel, and PowerPoint without a Microsoft 365 subscription. The catch? Ads appear in the sidebar, and every few hours, a 15-second video ad plays. This test version is currently limited to certain countries, including India, as first spotted by Beebom.
This free version isn’t the full Office experience. Word lacks drawing tools and line spacing features. Excel misses add-ins, pivot tables, and macros. PowerPoint drops dictation and custom slide shows. Microsoft also disables local file storage, forcing users to save everything on OneDrive.
Microsoft says there are "no plans" for a full rollout yet. However, the company has built Office to support ads, meaning wider availability is possible. This follows Microsoft's pattern—first testing AI-powered Office features in select countries before a global release with price hikes.
Microsoft offers free Office on the web, but it has fewer features. This new test might be a way to get more users hooked before pushing them toward paid plans. With Microsoft 365's price increases, an ad-supported free tier could be a new strategy to balance revenue and user growth.
Would you use Office with ads if it were free?
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