Microsoft is giving every U.S. college student a free year of Microsoft 365 Personal — the consumer suite that bundles Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, 1TB of OneDrive storage and the company’s Copilot AI assistants — and students can claim it for their personal Microsoft accounts through October 31, 2025. After that free 12-month period, students who want to keep the subscription can continue at half price.
Most colleges already give students access to institution-licensed versions of Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace for Education — but those are tied to school accounts and institutional controls. This giveaway is for students’ personal Microsoft accounts, which matters for people who want a full, portable setup they can keep after graduation: desktop apps, 1TB of private cloud storage, and Copilot integrated into the apps you already use for classes and side projects. The offer is explicitly aimed at U.S. college students and is claimable with a college email address.
What you actually get
The one-year free Microsoft 365 Personal package includes:
- Desktop and web versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and OneNote.
- Microsoft Copilot integrated into those apps — the summarizer, idea generator and assistant that can draft text, help analyze spreadsheets, and suggest slides or edits.
- 1TB of OneDrive cloud storage.
- If you want to keep the service after the free year, Microsoft says students will be eligible for a recurring 50% discount (Microsoft’s student pricing works out to about $4.99/month under that discounted rate)
How to claim it
Microsoft’s sign-up requires verification with a college email address and must be claimed by October 31, 2025, or while supplies last, according to Microsoft’s offer page. If you’re eligible, sign up through Microsoft’s student offer to convert your personal account into a 12-month trial with Copilot enabled. Don’t expect the campus IT portal to auto-enroll you — this is a consumer offer tied to your personal Microsoft account.
Microsoft’s CEO, Satya Nadella, announced the move during the White House’s AI Education Task Force meeting, where he also outlined additional commitments: educator grants, free LinkedIn AI courses for job seekers, students and teachers, and other investments aimed at expanding AI access in schools. Microsoft framed the package as support for the Presidential AI Challenge and a companion AI Education Executive Order.
That said, this moment sits in a political and cultural context that’s hard to ignore. The White House event drew big tech leaders and generated both enthusiasm and critique: supporters framed the pledges as practical steps to broaden AI literacy; critics warned that the rapid rollout of copilot-style tools in classrooms raises questions around student data, bias, and how AI will be used in assessment and learning. If you’re a student or educator, it’s worth weighing the convenience of readily available AI assistants against questions about classroom policy and data handling.
A few caveats and common-sense tips
- Privacy & data: Check the terms. A personal Microsoft 365 account is different from a managed school account; different rules apply for data retention and admin access.
- Academic honesty: Copilot is a tool, not a magic homework pass. Use it for drafts and brainstorming, but follow your school’s policies on citation and original work.
- Eligibility and timing: The deadline is firm — October 31 — and Microsoft specifies college email verification. If you graduate mid-year, you’ll still get the 12 months on your personal account; after that, you can keep the discounted rate if you choose.
So what should students do right now?
If you’re in the U.S. and enrolled in college: go to Microsoft’s student offer page, verify your eligibility with your college email and claim the 12-month Microsoft 365 Personal subscription before October 31, 2025. Even if you already use an institutional account for classwork, this personal plan is handy for extracurricular projects, freelancing, portfolio work, or simply keeping your notes and files after you leave campus.
This is a big, practical giveaway — a $99.99-value product being handed to students for free for a year — and it’s also a strategic play for Microsoft to seed Copilot in the next generation of users. For students, it’s an easy win if you need desktop apps, storage and AI help in your workflow. For the rest of us, it’s another sign that the fight to define how AI fits into education is shifting from policy pamphlets to the tools students actually open on their laptops.
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