Microsoft Licensing Intelligence

Microsoft Licence Transfer and Assignment Rules: Complete Enterprise Guide

Last reviewed: 2024-11-18 · Microsoft Negotiations

Microsoft Negotiations · Est. 2016 · 500+ Engagements · $2.1B Managed

Misapplying Microsoft's licence assignment and transfer rules is the second most common source of audit findings we see — after SQL Server virtualisation miscounting. The 90-day reassignment restriction trips up IT teams constantly in device refresh cycles, and the rules around perpetual licence transfers in M&A contexts are poorly understood even by experienced procurement professionals. After 500+ engagements managing $2.1B in Microsoft spend, this guide distils the transfer and assignment rules that matter most operationally — with the specific product variations that Microsoft's own documentation buries in footnotes.

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The 90-Day Reassignment Rule: What It Actually Means

Microsoft's Product Terms state that once a licence is assigned to a device or user, the same licence cannot be reassigned to a different device or user for 90 calendar days. This rule was designed to prevent a single licence from simultaneously covering multiple users through rapid rotation — a "hot-desking" licence scheme.

Scope of the 90-Day Rule

Product Category90-Day Rule AppliesAssignment UnitNotes
Microsoft 365 (per-user)✅ Yes (with exceptions)Named userImmediate reassignment permitted when user leaves org
Windows Server✅ YesPhysical server/VM per licence assignment90 days from last assignment date
SQL Server✅ YesPhysical core or Server+CALCritical for VMware dynamic migration management
Office perpetual (per-device)✅ YesNamed device90 days from device assignment; exceptions for hardware failure
M365 Apps (per-user)✅ Yes (with exception)Named user5 device installs per user; immediate reassignment on departure
Visual Studio subscriptions✅ Yes (with exception)Named subscriberImmediate reassignment when subscriber leaves org
Azure Reserved Instances⚠️ Different ruleScope (shared/single)Exchange/return within first 4 days; no standard 90-day rule
CAL (Client Access Licence)✅ YesNamed user or named devicePer-device CALs follow device; per-user CALs follow user

The Two Exceptions

The 90-day restriction has exactly two documented exceptions in Microsoft's Product Terms:

Exception 1 — Hardware failure: If the device to which a licence is assigned fails permanently (hardware failure, data destruction, physical loss or theft), the licence can be immediately reassigned to a replacement device. "Permanently fails" means the original device is no longer operational — not that it is temporarily repaired or in service. Documenting this exception requires: (a) an IT incident record confirming the failure, (b) the date of failure, (c) confirmation that the original device is being decommissioned. Without this documentation, the reassignment appears identical to a policy-violating rapid reassignment in an audit context.

Exception 2 — User departure: When the user to whom a licence is assigned leaves the organisation (resignation, termination, retirement), the licence can be immediately reassigned to a new user. "Leaves the organisation" means permanent departure, not temporary leave such as medical leave or secondment. The trigger documentation is the HR offboarding event — typically the Active Directory/Entra ID account deactivation date. For M365, ensure the deactivation is logged in the Microsoft 365 Admin Centre audit logs, which serve as primary evidence in an audit.

Device refresh trap: The most common 90-day rule violation occurs during device refresh programmes. An organisation replaces 500 laptops over 3 months. The IT team reassigns Office perpetual licences from old devices to new devices as the refresh proceeds. If the old devices are still operational (returned to IT but not yet decommissioned), the reassignment does not qualify under Exception 1, and both the old and new devices require separate licences during the 90-day window. This is a structural compliance gap that affects every organisation running a hardware refresh with per-device perpetual licences. The solution is either (a) accelerated decommission of replaced devices (zero-operational-day policy), or (b) migration to per-user M365 Apps for Enterprise, which eliminates the per-device restriction.

Perpetual Licence Transfers Between Organisations

Perpetual licences acquired under volume licensing agreements can be permanently transferred to another organisation with Microsoft's written consent. This is distinctly different from the 90-day reassignment rule — which governs reassignment within a single organisation — and involves the permanent change of licence ownership.

When Perpetual Licence Transfers Are Permitted

Microsoft permits perpetual licence transfers in the following scenarios:

Scenarios Where Perpetual Licence Transfers Are NOT Permitted

Licence Assignment Documentation Requirements

Proper licence assignment documentation is your audit defence. Microsoft's verification process during an audit asks two questions: what did you purchase, and where is it deployed? The assignment documentation connects the answer to question one (entitlement records in VLSC) to the answer to question two (deployment records in your SAM tool).

Minimum Documentation Standards

Product TypeAssignment Record RequiredWhere MaintainedRetention Period
M365 per-userUser → licence tier mapping with assignment dateMicrosoft Admin Centre (authoritative) + SAM toolDuration of licence + 5 years
Windows ServerLicence → physical host mapping with VM inventorySAM tool + virtualisation platform recordsDuration + 5 years
SQL ServerCore count per physical host (or per-VM for SE+) with virtualisation topologySAM tool with topology engineDuration + 5 years
CAL (per-device)CAL → device assignment listSAM tool / Active Directory recordsDuration + 5 years
CAL (per-user)CAL → user assignment listSAM tool / Active Directory recordsDuration + 5 years
90-day exception (hardware)IT incident record + decommission confirmationITSM system + SAM tool reassignment log5 years from reassignment date
90-day exception (user departure)HR offboarding date + Entra ID deactivation timestampHR system + Microsoft Admin Centre audit log5 years from reassignment date

Assignment Rules in Specific Scenarios

Shared Workstations and Kiosk Deployments

Shared workstations — devices used by multiple users in shift-based environments (retail, manufacturing, healthcare) — present specific assignment challenges. A single device used by 3 shift workers cannot be licenced with one per-user M365 licence; it requires either a per-device M365 F3 licence (for frontline scenarios) or individual per-user licences for each worker who uses the device.

The per-device model for M365 F1/F3 is the correct approach for shared device environments. Per-device licensing assigns the licence to the device, not the users — any authorised user can access the device without additional licence requirements. For the full frontline licensing framework, see the frontline worker licensing guide.

Contractor and Temporary Worker Assignments

Contractors using an organisation's Microsoft-licenced devices or services must be licenced under the same rules as employees. A contractor using a corporate laptop with Microsoft 365 E3 requires an M365 E3 licence — there is no "contractor exemption." However, contractors accessing corporate systems remotely (using their own devices) may qualify for External Connector licences for server products rather than full per-user/device licences, depending on the product and access scenario. For CAL rights, see the product use rights interpretation guide.

Azure Hybrid Benefit Assignment

Azure Hybrid Benefit is a use right assigned to Azure VMs, not a traditional per-device or per-user licence. AHUB must be actively applied to each eligible Azure VM in the Azure portal. The assignment rules: each Windows Server Standard licence with SA covers 2 Azure VMs up to the same or lesser edition. Each Windows Server Datacenter licence with SA covers an unlimited number of Azure VMs of any edition. The 90-day reassignment rule does not apply to AHUB reassignment between Azure VMs — AHUB can be toggled on and off any VM at any time without restriction.

For the complete AHUB optimisation guide, see the Azure Hybrid Benefit guide, and for how AHUB interacts with licence mobility provisions, see the licence mobility documentation guide.

Licence Transfer in M&A and Divestiture Contexts

The transfer rules described above for standard scenarios become significantly more complex in M&A contexts, where legal entity changes trigger specific provisions. For the complete M&A post-close operations framework — including how licence transfers interact with EA change of control provisions and TSA arrangements — see the dedicated M&A post-close licensing guide.

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Practical Compliance Management for Assignment Rules

Staying compliant with Microsoft's assignment rules operationally requires building assignment tracking into your SAM programme rather than managing it as a one-off audit exercise. The SAM programme should:

For the full SAM programme framework that incorporates assignment tracking, see the SAM programme implementation guide. For the tool platforms that automate assignment tracking, see the SAM tool comparison guide.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the 90-day reassignment restriction in Microsoft licensing?

Once a licence is assigned to a specific device or user, it cannot be reassigned to a different device or user for 90 days. Two exceptions exist: (1) the original assigned device fails permanently, and (2) the originally assigned user leaves the organisation. Outside these exceptions, reassigning within the 90-day window creates a compliance gap.

Can Microsoft EA licences be permanently transferred to another organisation?

EA subscription licences (M365, Azure) cannot be permanently transferred. Perpetual licences acquired under an EA can be permanently transferred to a third party with Microsoft's written consent, typically in M&A scenarios. The process requires a formal transfer request, takes 30–60 days, and incurs a documentation fee.

Can I reassign an M365 licence from a terminated employee to a new hire immediately?

Yes — this is explicitly covered by the second exception to the 90-day reassignment rule. When the originally assigned user leaves the organisation permanently, the licence can be immediately reassigned. The trigger documentation is the HR offboarding event and the Azure AD/Entra ID account deactivation timestamp.

Can I transfer Microsoft licences to a cloud provider for hosted deployments?

Server licences with active Software Assurance can be deployed at authorised third-party hosters through licence mobility provisions — not technically a transfer but a permitted deployment on shared infrastructure. The 90-day reassignment rule applies to reassigning the licence between servers at the hoster.

What happens to Microsoft licences in a company bankruptcy?

Subscription licences terminate if payments cease. Perpetual licences survive bankruptcy as property of the insolvent estate but cannot be transferred without Microsoft's written consent. Acquirers of bankrupt Microsoft EA customers typically need to purchase new licences.

Are there products exempt from the 90-day reassignment restriction?

Most on-premises and cloud licences are subject to the 90-day rule. Azure Reserved Instances follow different rules (exchange/return within first 4 days). Visual Studio subscriptions can be immediately reassigned when the subscriber leaves the organisation. Always verify current Product Terms for the specific product.

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