Quick Answer
Microsoft has simplified Dynamics 365 Copilot licensing in 2026. Basic Copilot features are now bundled with Dynamics 365 app licenses at no extra cost. The standalone Copilot for Sales SKU has been retired and rolled into the Microsoft 365 Copilot license ($30/user/month enterprise, $18/user/month SMB promotional through June 2026). Advanced agent capabilities consume Copilot Credits. The Microsoft 365 suite price increases take effect July 1, 2026.
If you've been putting off the Copilot licensing question because the pricing felt like a moving target, that’s frankly been a little understandable. Over the past couple of years, Microsoft has restructured Copilot subscriptions multiple times; Redmond has retired standalone SKUs, bundled in capabilities that used to cost extra, and introduced an entirely new consumption-based billing model for agentic AI features.
Ultimately, these changes were positive ones, and the end result is a licensing landscape that's genuinely simpler than it was a year ago once you understand how the pieces fit together. However, you still need to understand how the pieces fit together.
In this blog, we’ll break down the current state of Dynamics 365 Copilot licensing. We’ll look at what it costs, what's included, and the deadlines you should have on your calendar. (Spoiler alert, some of them are coming up very soon.)
The simplest way to think about Copilot license cost in the Dynamics 365 ecosystem is as three distinct layers, each covering different capabilities at different price points.
If you're already paying for many of the many Dynamics 365 modules, like Dynamics 365 Sales, Finance, Supply Chain Management, Customer Service, or Business Central, basic Copilot features now come bundled at no additional cost. This includes record summarization, contextual help, AI-assisted content drafting, and in-app Copilot chat. This is a meaningful change from earlier pricing models, where some of these capabilities required a separate Copilot license.
For Dynamics 365 Sales specifically, the embedded Copilot in the D365 client is included with both Enterprise and Premium licenses. You get AI-generated meeting prep summaries, real-time coaching during Teams calls, email drafting, and conversational CRM queries without paying anything beyond your existing Dynamics 365 Copilot subscription.
This is the $30/user/month enterprise license – however, through June 30, 2026, there is a promotional rate of $18/user/month for SMBs with under 300 users – through the Copilot Business SKU. It covers Copilot across the full M365 productivity suite, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Teams.
For Dynamics 365 customers, this license matters for two specific reasons.
First, the standalone Copilot for Sales licensing SKU has been retired. The capabilities it provided, like CRM-connected meeting summaries in Outlook and Teams, are now accessible only through the Microsoft 365 Copilot license.
Overall, this is a nice opportunity for savings. If you were previously paying the $20/user add-on for Copilot for Sales on top of your M365 license, that $50/user combined cost has been slashed to just $30. If you're a Dynamics 365 Sales Premium customer who adds M365 Copilot, you get the full Copilot for Sales capabilities with no separate add-on at all.
Second, the M365 Copilot license unlocks Work IQ, the integration layer that lets users interact with Dynamics 365 and Power Apps data conversationally through the M365 Copilot interface. This is how service reps pull D365 case data into Outlook, how sales teams access CRM records from Teams, and how HR can query Power Apps applications without opening a separate application. Without the M365 Copilot license, you don't get Work IQ.
This is the consumption-based layer that powers the advanced agent capabilities in Dynamics 365. The Sales Qualification Agent, Supplier Communications Agent, finance reconciliation agents, and custom agents built in Copilot Studio all consume Copilot Credits when they execute.
The Copilot license pricing for credits works two ways:
Dynamics 365 Premium SKUs include 1,000 Copilot Credits per user per month, pooled at the tenant level. So a team of 50 Premium users gets a shared pool of 50,000 credits monthly, which is enough for roughly 2,000 autonomous agent actions before overage kicks in.
For most organizations in the early stages of agent adoption, the included allotment will cover things comfortably. However, if you're planning aggressive use of autonomous agents across multiple departments, it's worth modeling your expected consumption before committing to a billing approach.
Microsoft 365 suite prices go up on July 1, 2026. The increases aren't individually enormous, but they can certainly compound across a large organization:
If you’re an existing customer, you will retain your current pricing until your next renewal after July 1.
It’s important to note that the Copilot license cost itself ($30/user/month enterprise) is not changing in this round of increases, nor are standalone Dynamics 365 app prices. But since Copilot requires a qualifying M365 base license, the effective total cost of a Copilot-enabled seat goes up regardless.
If you're planning to renew your Microsoft 365 subscriptions, doing so before July locks in the current rates. This is worth coordinating with your licensing partner sooner rather than later – especially because June is almost here..
The Copilot licensing picture is cleaner than it's been since Microsoft first started rolling out Copilot across its product lines. The retirement of the standalone Copilot for Sales SKU eliminates one of the more confusing pricing overlaps, and the bundling of basic Copilot features into Dynamics 365 app licenses removes the entry-level cost barrier entirely.
That said, the total cost of a fully Copilot-enabled Dynamics 365 environment is not just the Copilot license pricing. Like we’ve discussed in this blog, it's the M365 base license, plus the Copilot add-on, plus the Dynamics 365 app license, plus Copilot Credits for agent capabilities, plus the governance, training, and change management work that determines whether any of it delivers value.
Always remember: You should budget for the full picture, not just each of the line items.
IES helps organizations make sense of Microsoft's licensing landscape and build a Copilot strategy that aligns with their actual business needs rather than paying for capabilities they won't use. Whether you need a licensing audit, a Copilot readiness assessment, or help planning your rollout, we're here to help.