Classic Microsoft Office 2024 released: No subscription, limited updates
Microsoft has released a new, classic "boxed" version of the Office 2024 suite. Unlike the Microsoft 365 variant, it does not require a subscription. However, the boxed Office does not receive new features, especially in the LTSC variant.
10:02 AM EDT, October 2, 2024
The naming of Office variants has been very confusing. For the first few years, many people thought that the subscription version, called Office 365, was browser-only and that the classic applications were still sold with a lifetime license. With the advent of Office 2016, the default method of purchasing Office became a subscription, but it provides the same classic applications as the lifetime version.
Boxes becoming rarer
Since then, purchasing the non-subscription version has become increasingly difficult and costly. Gone are the days when you could buy the full suite for $50. You might miss those days, but it's worth noting that Professional versions have traditionally cost more than $250, and the 2007 promotional home edition was a one-time exception.
Office in the non-subscription version receives only five years of updates today and, importantly, no guarantee of connectivity with Microsoft's cloud services for the entire support period. It also does not include AI tools or expanded OneDrive disk capacity.
Although it requires only a one-time payment, consumers may find it insufficiently flexible precisely because of the lack of cloud collaboration. It will also receive very few new features—what is available at the start will remain roughly unchanged until the support period ends in 2030.
An extreme case is the LTSC variant, which is available under volume licensing for businesses and institutions. Its purchase is even more difficult than the regular lifetime license version, and we won't see any changes here. LTSC will be supplied only with security updates. However, subscription versions will deliver these via the same Click-to-Run application streaming mechanism.
What's new in Microsoft Office 2024?
The "boxed" Office is currently created based on snapshots of the subscription variant. Approximately every three years, Microsoft "freezes" a set of continuously developed features and sells it as a classic version that does not require a subscription or network access (except for activation). Office has now been developed in a "rolling release" mode, without new major releases. The main version number has been 16.0 for nearly a decade, and new features are added gradually with consistent intensity.
What are the new features in the 2024 version? In the case of Access, these include integration with Teams and Edge and macro signing. Excel has received 14 new text and table functions and the ability to insert images into cells using the =IMAGE function. PowerPoint includes features for creating seminar presentations with captioning and exporting to video formats.
All applications support new accessibility features, a new interface, and compatibility with the OpenDocument 1.4 format. This last point represents a significant course correction. A suite once known for its lack of interoperability, then for open but extremely complex formats (DOCX), and subsequently for faulty compatibility (ODF 1.1) today offers compatibility with an open format... in an unreleased version.
Office 2024 includes Publisher, though it will lose support after two years and will no longer be installed. It's also pleasing to see Outlook's presence in the classic version. Despite the active promotion of the "new Outlook version," built from scratch with cloud support, Microsoft agrees with the opinion of thousands of users that the new Outlook is far from ready to replace its predecessor. Therefore, Office 2024 will include the classic Outlook. However, there is no certainty that it will not quickly lose its ability to connect to Microsoft's consumer email services.
The lifetime version of Office can now only be recommended to individuals who prioritize not needing network connectivity and who do not use any of Microsoft's cloud services, including email and OneDrive. In all other cases, the subscription version makes much more sense. Provided, of course, that you need Office at all.