WPS vs. Microsoft 365 (2025): Which One Fits Budget‑Tight Teams?

👤 Lily Moore
📅 October 23, 2025

If you run a small or midsize organization and need to keep software costs lean, choosing between WPS Office and Microsoft 365 can feel like a trade‑off between price and breadth. This review focuses on what budget‑tight teams actually need: predictable total cost of ownership (TCO), collaboration depth, email/identity, storage, admin/security, offline parity, and migration realities. All pricing and plan details are current as of October 2025.

The short version (scenario‑based)

  • Choose WPS Office if you’re a micro team (≈5–10 users) that only needs documents/spreadsheets/presentations, can live without built‑in business email and enterprise admin/security, and wants the lowest possible subscription cost.
  • Choose Microsoft 365 if you need domain email and calendars, 1 TB per user storage, reliable real‑time coauthoring, Teams/SharePoint for collaboration, or consolidated security/device management as you scale.
  • If you’re unsure, model your TCO including third‑party add‑ons (email, storage beyond ~20 GB per user, MDM/EDR) that WPS users often assemble separately—those extras can eliminate the upfront savings.

Pricing and TCO: what it really costs to run

Reference prices (annual commitments; exclude taxes/discounts):

  • WPS Premium/Pro: commonly listed around $29.99–$35.99 per user per year; cloud storage is often reported as ~20 GB per user by software directories. Because WPS does not publish a canonical spec page for these numbers, treat them as directory‑verified, not vendor‑confirmed.
  • Microsoft 365 Business plans (per user/month, annual billing): Business Basic $6; Business Standard $12.50; Business Premium $22; Apps for Business $8.25, according to the official Microsoft 365 Business plans page (Microsoft, 2025).
  • Billing note: Microsoft’s annual‑term subscriptions billed monthly carry roughly a 5% premium starting April 1, 2025, per the Partner Center April 2025 announcements (Microsoft). Paying annually upfront avoids this.

TCO snapshots (annual):

Team size WPS Premium/Pro (≈$30/yr) M365 Business Basic ($6/mo) M365 Business Standard ($12.50/mo) M365 Business Premium ($22/mo)
5 users ≈ $150 $360 $750 $1,320
20 users ≈ $600 $1,440 $3,000 $5,280
50 users ≈ $1,500 $3,600 $7,500 $13,200

How to read this:

  • WPS looks dramatically cheaper on licenses alone. But it doesn’t include domain email, 1 TB per‑user storage, or enterprise‑grade admin/security—most teams add separate services for these, which raises effective TCO.
  • Microsoft 365’s higher sticker price bundles Exchange email, Teams/SharePoint, OneDrive storage, and (on Premium) endpoint and identity protections. For teams that would buy these capabilities anyway, the bundle can be cost‑competitive.

What you get with each suite (at a glance)

WPS Office (Free, Premium/Pro, Business)

  • Core apps: Writer, Spreadsheets, Presentation; PDF tools (advanced in Premium/Pro). Cross‑platform: Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android.
  • Storage: WPS Cloud included; Premium/Pro storage is commonly reported as ~20 GB per user by directories (not confirmed on a canonical WPS spec page).
  • Device limits: Premium can be used on up to 9 devices (3 PCs + 6 mobiles), stated in a 2025 WPS blog post; see the WPS premium devices reference (WPS blog, 2025).
  • Collaboration: Co‑editing/sharing exist but enterprise details (versioning, permissions, admin audit) aren’t comprehensively documented publicly.
  • Email/identity: Not included—you’ll need separate business email/SSO/identity.
  • Admin/security: Public materials do not document enterprise SSO, DLP, MDM/EDR, or formal compliance certifications; verify with WPS sales if required.
  • Pricing signal: Premium/Pro is frequently listed near $29.99–$35.99/year and ~20 GB storage by directories such as the WPS Office pricing page (Capterra, updated 2025).

Best fit: Very small teams with basic document work, light collaboration, and minimal compliance/security needs—especially those already using separate email and storage.

Constraints to weigh: Ad‑supported free tier; limited public info on enterprise admin/security/SLA; smaller storage quotas than Microsoft; possible formatting variance with complex Office files/macros.

Microsoft 365 Business (Basic, Standard, Premium, Apps for Business)

  • Core apps/services: Outlook/Exchange (email and calendaring), OneDrive, SharePoint, Teams; desktop Office apps included in Standard and Premium; Apps for Business includes desktop apps only (no Exchange/Teams). See the official Microsoft 365 Business plans page (Microsoft, 2025).
  • Storage: 1 TB OneDrive per user by default; expansion paths documented in the OneDrive for Business service description (Microsoft Learn, 2025). SharePoint tenant storage is 1 TB + 10 GB per licensed user.
  • Collaboration: Mature real‑time coauthoring, version history, sharing policies, and team sites. External collaboration is smoother with partners already on Microsoft.
  • Email/identity: Exchange Online with custom domain; Entra ID (formerly Azure AD) for identity.
  • Admin/security: Business Premium adds consolidated device management and security (Intune MDM/MAM, Conditional Access/MFA, Defender for Business EDR, Purview DLP/labels). Even Basic/Standard benefit from policy controls across OneDrive/SharePoint/Teams.
  • SLA/support: Financially backed 99.9% uptime for core online services per the Microsoft Online Services SLA (Microsoft, 2025).

Best fit: Teams that need domain email, structured collaboration, 1 TB per‑user storage, and predictable admin/security as headcount grows (especially remote or distributed teams).

Constraints to weigh: Higher ongoing cost; plan complexity; training/rollout time; monthly billing premium if you don’t pay annually upfront (from April 2025).

Collaboration and storage: where they differ in day‑to‑day work

  • Real‑time coauthoring and meetings: Microsoft 365’s Word/Excel/PowerPoint coauthoring paired with Teams meetings/chat and SharePoint team sites creates an end‑to‑end workflow. WPS supports co‑editing and sharing, but documentation of enterprise‑grade versioning/permissions/SLA is limited.
  • Storage scale: Microsoft 365 gives each user 1 TB OneDrive by default (with documented expansion paths) and pooled SharePoint storage for teams and departments. WPS Premium/Pro is commonly reported to include ~20 GB per user via directories—sufficient for micro teams, but most growing SMBs will want more headroom.
  • External collaboration: Microsoft 365 is often required by vendors/clients for Teams invites and SharePoint sharing; using WPS alongside third‑party clouds can work, but there’s more moving parts to manage.

Email, identity, admin, and security

  • Email/identity: Microsoft 365 includes Exchange Online and Entra‑based identity—no extra vendors needed. WPS requires separate choices for email hosting and SSO.
  • Device management and security: Microsoft 365 Business Premium rolls in MDM/MAM, endpoint detection/response, Conditional Access/MFA, and basic DLP/labeling. Replicating equivalent protections around WPS means assembling point tools, which increases cost and complexity.
  • Compliance posture: Microsoft publishes extensive service descriptions, audit, and retention policies. WPS’s business/enterprise compliance documentation is not consolidated publicly—confirm with sales if your industry has specific requirements.

Platform coverage and offline parity

  • WPS: Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android. Offline editing is supported in desktop apps. The familiar UI eases onboarding for users coming from Office.
  • Microsoft 365: Windows and macOS desktop apps in Standard/Premium/Apps for Business; web and mobile apps across plans; Linux users can work via web apps. Offline parity is generally strong with the desktop apps.

Migration and compatibility

  • Moving to Microsoft 365: Microsoft provides prescriptive guidance for migrating email and files; see the “Migrate your organization data to Microsoft 365” guide (Microsoft Learn, 2025).
  • Document fidelity: Both suites open and edit DOCX/XLSX/PPTX, but complex formatting, advanced Excel functions, macros/VBA, and template behaviors can differ. Always test representative files before a wholesale switch.
  • Change management: Expect some training time regardless of direction; align rollout with champions and pilot groups.

Support and uptime expectations

  • Microsoft 365: 99.9% financially backed uptime for core online services (with service credits if breached), documented in the 2025 Online Services SLA. Severity‑based support escalation is standard; faster response times may require higher‑tier support.
  • WPS: Premium users appear to receive priority support, but we did not find a formal, public uptime SLA for WPS Cloud. If SLAs matter, ask WPS sales for documentation.

How to choose: quick decision guide

  • Pick WPS Office if:

    • You’re a very small team with basic doc/spreadsheet/presentation needs.
    • You’re fine piecing together separate email and storage (and your clients don’t require Teams/SharePoint access).
    • You value Linux desktop support and the lowest subscription cost.
  • Pick Microsoft 365 if:

    • You need domain email + calendaring, 1 TB/user storage, real‑time coauthoring, and streamlined file sharing with external partners.
    • You want built‑in device management and security (Business Premium) instead of juggling multiple vendors.
    • You anticipate growth and want clear admin controls, permissions, and retention policies.
  • Still undecided? Run the math:

    1. List your must‑haves: email, storage per user, real‑time coauthoring, compliance/security controls.
    2. Price the “add‑ons” you’d need with WPS (email hosting, cloud storage beyond ~20 GB/user, MDM/EDR).
    3. Compare that total to Microsoft 365 Basic/Standard/Premium at your seat count.
    4. Factor rollout and training time, external collaboration needs, and any SLA requirements.

Important notes and uncertainties (as of Oct 2025)

  • WPS Premium/Pro storage (~20 GB per user) and some pricing details are widely reported by directories but are not confirmed on a single, canonical WPS spec page; validate with WPS before purchase.
  • WPS Business plan features (SSO, admin console, DLP/MDM, compliance, SLA) aren’t consolidated publicly—request documentation from sales.
  • Microsoft OneDrive storage starts at 1 TB per user with documented expansion paths; eligibility and limits can vary by plan/approval—review the Microsoft Learn OneDrive service description for specifics.
  • Microsoft’s annual‑term monthly billing premium (≈5%) began April 1, 2025; paying annually upfront avoids it.

Sources cited inline: Microsoft plan/pricing and service descriptions (2025), Microsoft Partner Center announcement (April 2025), Microsoft Online Services SLA (2025); WPS blog devices reference (2025) and Capterra pricing page (2025). For detailed plan specs and the latest pricing, consult the vendors’ official pages directly.