Microsoft Project is not your CIO's first thought when reviewing enterprise software spend — it sits quietly in the Microsoft EA as a line item, often purchased at the request of the PMO and renewed without scrutiny. That invisibility is expensive. Our Project & Portfolio Management Pricing Guide shows that Microsoft Project licensing is frequently misaligned with actual usage: organizations deploy Plan 5 seats for users who only need Plan 1 functionality, and carry Project Online licenses for a platform that Microsoft has effectively deprecated in favor of Project for the web.
The Microsoft EA dynamic is the most important context for understanding Project pricing. Microsoft Project is almost never purchased as a standalone — it is included in Enterprise Agreement renewals alongside Microsoft 365, Azure, and Dynamics. Its price is therefore a function of the overall EA negotiation, not just Project's own commercial terms. Enterprises that manage Project as a separate line item miss the opportunity to leverage it within the broader EA discussion.
Microsoft Project Pricing Model Explained
Microsoft Project for the web (the current platform) offers three subscription tiers:
Project Plan 1 — $10/user/month (list) — Basic project management for team members. Grid, board, and timeline views; task assignments; integration with Microsoft 365. No resource management, portfolio views, or time-reporting. Appropriate for contributors and task-level project participants.
Project Plan 3 — $30/user/month (list) — Full project management with resource management, baselines, scheduling, and reporting. Suitable for project managers and PMO staff. Includes Project Home for portfolio overview. The standard PMO-user tier in most enterprise deployments.
Project Plan 5 — $55/user/month (list) — Adds portfolio selection, optimization, and demand management on top of Plan 3 capabilities. Designed for enterprise portfolio management teams and PMO leadership. Includes Power BI integration for portfolio reporting and resource capacity planning at the portfolio level.
Separately, Project Online (the legacy SharePoint-based PPM platform) is still licensed and supported but Microsoft has explicitly positioned it as a mature product while directing investment to Project for the web. Organizations still on Project Online should plan migration to Project for the web — Microsoft has not announced an end-of-life date but feature parity is reached and new development is in Project for the web only.
What Enterprises Actually Pay for Microsoft Project
| Plan / Tier | List Price (Per User/Month) | EA Negotiated Rate | Typical EA Discount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Project Plan 1 | $10.00 | $7.50–$8.50 | 15–25% |
| Project Plan 3 | $30.00 | $22.00–$26.00 | 13–27% |
| Project Plan 5 | $55.00 | $40.00–$48.00 | 13–27% |
| Project Online Premium (legacy) | $55.00 | $38.00–$46.00 | 16–31% |
EA discounts on Microsoft Project are negotiated as part of the broader Enterprise Agreement and typically reflect the total value of the Microsoft relationship. An organization with a $5M+ annual Microsoft EA including Azure, M365, and Dynamics has significantly more negotiating leverage on Project Plan rates than an organization purchasing Project as a standalone add-on. Enterprises that added Project to an existing large EA achieved 22–28% discounts; standalone Project purchasers averaged 13–16%.
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Leverage Microsoft Project in the EA Negotiation
The most important tactic for reducing Microsoft Project costs is ensuring that Project is explicitly included in EA renewal negotiations rather than accepted at standard catalog rates. Many organizations let Project auto-renew as a line item without addressing it in the EA conversation. Enterprises that put Project on the negotiating table — alongside M365, Azure, and Dynamics — and explicitly asked for a Project-specific discount as part of the EA package achieved 20–28% off list. Those that renewed Project quietly through the existing EA renewal path averaged 12–15% discounts.
Right-Sizing Plan Tiers
Plan tier right-sizing is frequently the largest cost optimization opportunity in Microsoft Project deployments. Enterprise audit data shows that 30–40% of Plan 3 and Plan 5 license holders use only Plan 1 features — they access tasks and timelines but never touch resource management, portfolio views, or demand management. Converting these users to Plan 1 at $10/user/month versus $30–$55/user/month produces immediate, significant savings without any functional impact on the majority of users. The right approach: license Plan 3 or Plan 5 only for active project managers and PMO staff; use Plan 1 for all other participants.
Competitive Alternatives for Negotiation Leverage
Microsoft is less sensitive to PPM competitive threats than it is to M365 or Azure alternatives — Project is a small part of total Microsoft revenue and Microsoft's account team knows you are unlikely to rip out Project if you are already deeply invested in the M365 ecosystem. However, documenting evaluations of Planview, Smartsheet, or monday.com as enterprise PPM alternatives is still worth doing. It signals that Project's value is being actively assessed and occasionally produces incremental discount offers at EA renewal.
Microsoft Project Pricing by Product/Module
| Product | List Price | Key Capability |
|---|---|---|
| Project Plan 1 | $10/user/month | Task management, grid/board/timeline views |
| Project Plan 3 | $30/user/month | Full PM: resource mgmt, baselines, reporting |
| Project Plan 5 | $55/user/month | Portfolio mgmt, demand, capacity planning |
| Project Online Essential | $10/user/month | Legacy SharePoint PPM — team member access |
| Project Online Professional | $30/user/month | Legacy SharePoint PPM — PM features |
| Project Online Premium | $55/user/month | Legacy SharePoint PPM — portfolio features |
Are You on the Right Project Plan?
Tier misalignment in Microsoft Project deployments is extremely common — organizations often pay for Plan 3 or Plan 5 when Plan 1 would serve the majority of users. We audit your license usage and quantify the right-sizing opportunity within 24 hours.
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Plan Tier Over-Provisioning. The most common and costly Microsoft Project trap is assigning Plan 3 or Plan 5 licenses to users who only need Plan 1 functionality. Many organizations provision at the highest tier "to be safe" or because the PMO requested it without distinguishing between project managers and team members. Proper tier assignment — Plan 1 for contributors, Plan 3 for PMs, Plan 5 for portfolio managers — typically reduces Project license costs by 30–45%.
Project Online and Project for the Web Duplication. Organizations that have started migrating to Project for the web while still maintaining Project Online subscriptions pay for both simultaneously. This dual-licensing period is understandable during migration but frequently extends far beyond what is necessary. Audit how many users are actively using Project Online versus Project for the web and accelerate the migration timeline to eliminate dual-licensing costs.
Inactive Licensed Users. Like all per-user Microsoft products, Project accrues licenses for departed employees, contractors whose engagements have ended, and users who accessed the platform for a single project years ago. A simple usage audit before EA renewal typically identifies 15–25% of Project licenses assigned to inactive or minimally active users.
Project Not Included in EA Negotiation. Microsoft EA negotiations are high-stakes and time-pressured, and Project is often treated as a small-dollar item not worth negotiating. This is wrong — even a 10% discount on 500 Plan 3 licenses saves $18,000 per year, and the same negotiating effort that achieves EA-level M365 and Azure discounts can achieve comparable Project discounts if Project is explicitly on the table.
Microsoft Project Renewal Pricing: What Changes and What Does Not
Microsoft Project renewal pricing within an EA is subject to Microsoft's annual list price adjustments, which have been trending upward since 2022. The March 2022 Microsoft pricing increase raised commercial pricing for M365 by 15–25%, and Project pricing has seen similar incremental increases in subsequent EA cycles. Enterprises that did not lock in multi-year pricing before 2023 have faced meaningful list price increases at renewal.
What changes at renewal: Microsoft is actively transitioning the Project product line from Project Online (SharePoint-based) to Project for the web (Power Platform-based). At renewal, Microsoft's account team will encourage — and in some cases require — migration to Project for the web licensing if you are currently on Project Online. This is generally beneficial for new features but may require configuration and data migration work that carries implementation cost.
What does not change: the EA bundling leverage. Every Microsoft Project renewal should be part of the broader Microsoft EA conversation. Enterprises with large Azure and M365 commitments have more leverage on Project pricing than they typically realize. Use it.
For related benchmark data in the project management segment, see our article on Jira (Atlassian) pricing.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does Microsoft Project cost for enterprises?
Microsoft Project Plan 3 (the standard PMO tier) lists at $30/user/month. Enterprise Agreement discounts of 15–27% reduce this to $22–$26/user/month. For a 200-user PMO deployment, EA-negotiated Project Plan 3 pricing typically runs $52,800–$62,400 per year. When Plan 1 licenses are used for non-PM team members, blended enterprise costs drop significantly.
Is Microsoft Project included in Microsoft 365?
No — Microsoft Project is a separate subscription add-on not included in any Microsoft 365 or Office 365 plan. Basic task management features (Planner, To Do, Teams tasks) are included in M365, but enterprise PPM functionality requires Project Plan 1, 3, or 5 licensing purchased separately or through a Microsoft EA.
What is the difference between Project Online and Project for the web?
Project Online is the legacy SharePoint-based enterprise PPM platform that Microsoft continues to support but is no longer actively developing. Project for the web is the modern, Power Platform-based successor — it has a cleaner user experience, better M365 integration, and is receiving all new feature investment. Microsoft is encouraging migration from Project Online to Project for the web. New enterprise deployments should use Project for the web.
How does Microsoft Project compare to Smartsheet or monday.com?
Microsoft Project Plan 3 at $22–$26/user/month (EA) is comparable in price to Smartsheet Business ($19–$24/user/month) and monday.com Standard ($9–$16/user/month), though monday.com's enterprise tiers increase significantly. Microsoft Project's advantage is deep M365 integration; Smartsheet and monday.com offer more flexible work management and collaboration features that resonate with non-PM teams. Many enterprises run Microsoft Project for formal PMO project management while team-level work happens in Smartsheet or monday.com.
What is the best way to reduce Microsoft Project costs?
The highest-value actions are: (1) audit and right-size plan tiers — assign Plan 1 to team members, Plan 3 to project managers, Plan 5 to portfolio managers only; (2) remove inactive licensed users before renewal; (3) explicitly include Project in EA negotiation rather than auto-renewing at catalog rates; (4) if still on Project Online, accelerate migration to eliminate dual-licensing costs. These four steps together typically produce 25–40% reduction in total Microsoft Project annual spend.
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