Upgrade from Office 2010 Home or Business to Office 365
Office Home and Business 2010 will be retired in 2020


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Familiar apps with all the latest features
Familiar apps with all the latest features
PowerPoint
Maximize the visual impact of your presentations with PowerPoint in Office 365.
OneNote
Get organized with OneNote, the digital notebook that lets you type, draw, and more.
Outlook
Get more done with an intelligent inbox and focus on the emails that matter most.
Top Questions
Office 2010 include applications such as Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook. They’re available as a one-time purchase for use on a single PC.
See system requirements for compatible versions of Windows and macOS, and for other feature requirements.
If you purchase an auto-renew subscription, your subscription starts when you complete your purchase. You can purchase auto-renew subscriptions from Office365.com, MicrosoftStore.com, iTunes®, and some other retailers. If you purchase a pre-paid subscription, your subscription starts when you activate your subscription and land on your My Account page. You can purchase pre-paid subscriptions from a retailer or reseller, or a Microsoft support agent.
If you have an active Office 365 Home subscription, you can share it with up to four members of your household. Each household member you share your subscription with can use any of your available installs on their PCs, Macs, iPads, Android tablets, Windows tablets, iPhones® or Android phones, get an additional 1 TB of OneDrive storage, and manage their own installs from www.office.com/myaccount.1
“The cloud” is a friendly way of describing web-based computing services that are hosted outside of your home or organization. When you use cloud-based services, your IT infrastructure resides off your property (off-premises), and is maintained by a third party (hosted), instead of residing on a server at your home or business (on-premises) that you maintain. With Office 365, for example, information storage, computation, and software are located and managed remotely on servers owned by Microsoft. Many services you use every day are a part of the cloud—everything from web-based email to mobile banking and online photo storage. Because this infrastructure is located online or “in the cloud,” you can access it virtually anywhere, from a PC, tablet, smartphone, or other device with an Internet connection.
Office 365 is the latest version of Office. Previous versions include Office 2013, Office 2010, and Office 2007.