Microsoft's August 30 announcement blog post and the accompanying Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) document about the coming changes have more details. Technically, that means an Office 365 Home customer could have 30 Home subscriptions running at the same time, with each user getting five signed-in devices. For Home, starting October 2nd, that updates to six users, across all your devices and each user can be signed into five devices at the same time. They can load the Office apps onto multiple devices, but only be signed into five. Starting on October 2nd, Office 365 Personal users can sign into five concurrent devices at the same time. Office 365 Personal, which costs $69.99, currently limits one user to installing these Office apps five devices. The current limit on number of devices total which can run these Office apps is 10 across the five users. Office 365 Home and Personal users will be able to install Office on all their devices, but they'll be limited in terms of the number of simultaneously signed-in users allowed.Ĭurrently, Office 365 Home, which costs $99.99 per year, enables five people in a "household" to use the core Office apps (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and OneNote) and get 1 TB per person (for a total of 5 TB) of OneDrive Storage. Starting October 2, Microsoft will be increasing the device limits for its Office 365 Home and Personal subscribers.
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