

“Microsoft 365 Personal and Family subscriptions are generally available today worldwide, with additional benefits added over time. “Today is just the first step in delivering new features and value that helps us all navigate life,” says Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft’s corporate vice president of modern life, search, and devices. Microsoft will connect to your bank and credit card accounts to import transactions and balances and generate alerts for fees, charges, and monthly spend. It’s a new feature that’s designed for personal finance management to make it easier to track and analyze spending in Excel. Office 365 subscriptions include the Free edition, but Office 365 E1, E3, E5, F1 and F3 subscriptions also include the features listed under the Office 365 apps column. Azure, Dynamics 365, Intune, and Power Platform. Money in Excel will be available soon, Microsoft says. The Free edition is included with a subscription of a commercial online service, e.g.

Microsoft Editor, an add-on for Chrome or Edge, is also available with writing assistance and grammar corrections wherever you write on the web. If you’re trying to do the math on the deal, start by considering how many computers you plan to use Office with: For one PC, Office 365 is 100 per year. Microsoft’s new Family Safety app is coming soon. The PowerPoint Presenter Coach feature, which helps people practice a slidedeck and avoid stuttering and swearing, is available as part of the subscriptions. Many of the Office-related improvements are live, though. Two of the biggest additions to Microsoft 365, a Microsoft Family Safety app and Microsoft Teams for consumers, aren’t actually available with the launch of the subscriptions today. Microsoft aims to win back consumers with new Microsoft 365 subscriptions
