Release date |
Title |
Components |
Notes |
EoL Mainstream Support |
EoL Extended Support
|
October 1, 1990[1]
|
The Microsoft Office for Windows
|
Word 1.1, Excel 2.0, PowerPoint 2.0[2]
|
|
December 31, 1996
|
—
|
March 4, 1991[3]
|
Office 1.5
|
Word 1.1, Excel 3.0, PowerPoint 2.0
|
|
December 31, 1996
|
—
|
July 8, 1991[4]
|
Office 1.6
|
Word 1.1, Excel 3.0, PowerPoint 2.0, Mail 2.1
|
Last version for Windows 3.0.
|
December 31, 1996
|
—
|
Early 1992
|
Office 2.5
|
Word 2.0a, Excel 4.0, PowerPoint 2.0e, Mail 2.1
|
Mail 2.1: licence only, no software.
|
March 31, 1998
|
—
|
August 30, 1992
|
Office 3.0
|
Word 2.0c, Excel 4.0, PowerPoint 3.0, Mail 3.0
|
|
September 30, 1998
|
—
|
January 17, 1994
|
Office 4.0
|
Word 6.0, Excel 4.0, PowerPoint 3.0, Mail 3.1
|
|
November 1, 2000
|
—
|
June 2, 1994
|
Office 4.3
|
Word 6.0, Excel 5.0, PowerPoint 4.0, Mail 3.2, Access 2.0
|
|
November 1, 2000
|
—
|
July 3, 1994
|
Office for NT 4.2
|
Word 6.0, Excel 5.0, PowerPoint 4.0, Office Manager
|
|
November 1, 2000
|
—
|
August 24, 1995
|
Office 95 (7.0)
|
Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Schedule+, Binder, Access, Bookshelf
|
- The first Office version to have the same version number (7.0, inherited from Word 6.0) for all major component products (Word, Excel and so on).
- First fully 32-bit version.
|
December 31, 2001
|
—
|
November 19, 1996
|
Office 97 (8.0)
|
Word 97, Word 98, Excel, PowerPoint, Access, Publisher 97, Publisher 98, Outlook 97, Outlook 98, BookShelf Basics, Small Business Financial Manager 97, Small Business Financial Manager 98, Automap Street Plus, Direct Mail Manager, Expedia Streets 98
|
- First version to receive extended support.
- Published on CD-ROM as well as on a set of 45 3½-inch floppy disks, became Y2K-safe with Service Release 2.
- Last version for Windows NT 3.51.
|
August 31, 2001
|
February 28, 2002
|
June 20, 1997
|
Office 97 Powered by Word 98 (8.5)
|
- Word 98 was released only in Japanese and Korean editions.
- First version to contain Outlook 98 in all editions and Publisher 98 in the Small Business Edition.
|
June 7, 1999
|
Office 2000 (9.0)
|
Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, Access, Publisher, Small Business Tools, FrontPage, PhotoDraw
|
- First version to receive 5 years of extended support.
- Second version to receive extended support.
- Final version not to include Product Activation and not covered by Office Genuine Advantage, although on individual installs, the Office Update website still required the presence of original install media for updates to install.
- Last version for Windows 95.
|
June 30, 2004
|
July 14, 2009
|
May 31, 2001
|
Office XP (10.0)
|
Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, Access, FrontPage, Publisher, Small Business Tools
|
- Second version to receive 5 years of extended support.
- Third version to receive extended support.
- Improved support for working in user accounts without administrative privileges.
- First version to support Windows Vista, Server 2008 and Server 2008 R2.
- Last version for Windows NT 4.0, Windows 98 and Windows ME.
- Final version to support 9x-based operating systems.
- Also known as Office 2002.
|
July 11, 2006[5]
|
July 12, 2011[5]
|
August 19, 2003
|
Office 2003 (11.0)
|
Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, Access, Publisher, OneNote, InfoPath
|
- First version to support Windows 7.
- Third version to receive 5 years of extended support.
- Fourth version to receive extended support.
- First version to only support NT-based operating systems.
- Final version to have legacy interface.
- OneNote is introduced in this version.
- Final version to have Arial and Times New Roman as the default fonts across all applications.
- Last version for Windows 2000.
|
April 14, 2009[6]
|
April 8, 2014[6]
|
January 30, 2007
|
Office 2007 (12.0)
|
Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Publisher, Access, Groove, OneNote, InfoPath, Communicator, Visio Viewer, OCT
|
- Fourth version to receive 5 years of extended support.
- Fifth version to receive extended support.
- First version to support Windows 8, Windows 8.1 and Windows 10
- First version to use the new Ribbon user interface with tabbed menus.
- First version to have Calibri as the default font across all applications.
|
October 9, 2012[7]
|
October 10, 2017[7]
|
June 15, 2010[8]
|
Office 2010 (14.0)
|
Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook, Publisher, Access, InfoPath, SharePoint Workspace, Visio Viewer, OCT, Lync
|
|
October 13, 2015[10]
|
October 13, 2020[10]
|
January 29, 2013
|
Office 2013 (15.0)
|
Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook, Publisher, Access, Lync, Skype for Business, Visio Viewer
|
- Sixth version to receive 5 years of extended support.
- Seventh version to receive extended support.
- Lync is replaced with Skype for Business after an update.
|
April 10, 2018[11]
|
April 11, 2023[11]
|
September 22, 2015
|
Office 2016 (16.0)
|
Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook, Publisher, Access, Skype for Business, Visio Viewer
|
|
October 13, 2020[12]
|
October 14, 2025[12]
|
September 24, 2018
|
Office 2019 (16.0)
|
Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook, Publisher, Access, Skype for Business, Visio Viewer
|
- Final version to receive extended support.
- Second perpetual release of Office 16 unlocking certain features previously limited to Office 365 customers.
- OneNote was removed from the suite, and a redesigned UWP version of the app is bundled with all Windows releases instead.[13] However, the x86 version of OneNote was added back to the suite in March 2020, as it went back into active development.[14]
|
October 10, 2023[15]
|
October 14, 2025[15]
|
October 5, 2021
|
Office 2021 (16.0)
|
Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook, Publisher, Access, Skype for Business, Visio Viewer
|
|
October 13, 2026
[16]
|
—
|