OneDrive Versioning vs Backup: What Enterprise Licences Actually Cover

Last reviewed: 2026-03-30 · Microsoft Negotiations

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OneDrive's version history is one of the most misunderstood features in enterprise Microsoft licensing. IT teams assume it provides backup — it doesn't. Legal teams assume retention policies protect it — they protect access, not recoverability. The result is a coverage gap that 47% of organisations discover during an actual recovery event rather than before. Here's what your current licences actually provide, what they don't, and what it costs to close the gap.

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What OneDrive Version History Actually Does

OneDrive's version history is a feature that records file changes, not file snapshots. This distinction matters enormously when you're designing a recovery strategy. When a user modifies a document — say, 30 edits in a Word file — each edit can create a version entry, but only if the application registers it as a discrete save event. Continuous sync-based edits may consolidate into fewer version entries.

Default Configuration & Limits

What Version History Does NOT Cover

Understanding the gaps is as critical as understanding the feature itself:

Key takeaway: Version history is a file-change tracking tool, not a backup system. It's a valuable recovery aid for accidental overwrites and recent deletions — but it has hard limits that sophisticated threats can exploit.

Ransomware and the Version History Trap

Modern ransomware campaigns targeting OneDrive operate in stages. The attacker exfiltrates data first (the real objective), then encrypts files as a pressure mechanism. The encryption method matters:

  1. Ransomware creates encrypted copies of files while leaving originals intact
  2. Originals are then deleted
  3. Users see encrypted versions as "current" and unencrypted versions (if any survive) in version history
  4. If the ransomware generates more than 500 version entries per file, the oldest clean versions are automatically discarded

OneDrive Files Restore: The Built-In Recovery Tool

Microsoft includes OneDrive Files Restore with M365 E3, E5, and Business licences at no additional cost. This tool detects mass file changes and allows point-in-time recovery up to 30 days. For ransomware scenarios, this is the primary rapid-recovery mechanism — it reverts the entire OneDrive to a state before encryption occurred.

The limitation: Files Restore uses version history infrastructure. If ransomware has generated more than 500 version entries per file, or if the version window has exceeded 30 days, Files Restore cannot recover to that point.

Risk Assessment for Large Organisations

A 10,000-user organisation with 8GB average consumed OneDrive per user = approximately 80TB of data. A sophisticated ransomware variant that generates 600 version entries per file across 50,000 files would exhaust the 500-version cap on many files, orphaning clean versions before Files Restore could execute. This is a real attack vector.

Real-world impact: Organisations with >100,000 files relying solely on version history for ransomware recovery are exposed. A third-party backup or Microsoft 365 Backup add-on is the risk-mitigation layer.

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OneDrive Storage Licensing: What You're Actually Paying For

OneDrive storage allowances vary by licence SKU, but the real lever for cost is how organisations pool and allocate that storage. Here's the breakdown:

Licence OneDrive Storage Version History Files Restore M365 Backup Eligible
M365 Business Basic 1TB per user Yes (180 days) Yes (30 days) Yes (add-on)
M365 E3 1TB per user + 10GB/licensed user to pool Yes (180 days) Yes (30 days) Yes
M365 E5 1TB per user + 10GB/licensed user to pool Yes (180 days) Yes (30 days) Yes
M365 F1 2GB per user Yes (30 days) Limited Yes (if upgraded to F3)
M365 F3 2GB per user Yes (180 days) Yes Yes

Storage Pooling: The Licensing Reality

Microsoft pools all user storage allocations into a single tenant-wide reserve. A 1,000-user organisation with M365 E3 licences has 1TB per user (1,000TB) + 10GB × 1,000 (10TB) = 1,010TB total. Actual usage matters far more than the per-user allocation for licensing audit purposes. If only 600TB is consumed, the organisation is not exceeding its allocation. This flexibility is valuable during negotiations — organisations with lower-than-expected consumption can negotiate carve-outs for capacity-based pricing.

Microsoft 365 Backup for OneDrive

Microsoft 365 Backup is a separately licensed add-on ($0.15/GB/month of protected OneDrive data) that provides purpose-built backup recovery independent of version history limits. It offers granular, admin-controlled recovery at file, folder, or full-OneDrive scope with a 30-day restore window and 10-minute backup frequency.

Cost Model: Real Numbers for 1,000 Users

Scenario: 1,000-user enterprise, 8GB average OneDrive consumption per user (typical; most users don't exceed 50GB even with 1TB allocation).

Year 1: 8,000GB × $0.15/month = $1,200/month = $14,400/year
Year 2 (15% growth): 9,200GB × $0.15/month = $1,380/month = $16,560/year
Year 3 (25% growth): 11,500GB × $0.15/month = $1,725/month = $20,700/year
3-year total: ~$51,660

What M365 Backup Adds Over Files Restore

Microsoft 365 Archive for OneDrive

Archive ($0.05/GB/month) is a cold storage tier designed for inactive or compliance-held OneDrive content. The primary use case is former employee data retention.

The Licensing Trap: Deleted User OneDrive Retention

When a user is deleted from M365, their OneDrive is retained for 30 days by default before permanent deletion. If a compliance hold is placed, this extends to 365 days — only if a valid licence remains assigned to the account. After 365 days or licence removal, data is permanently deleted with no recovery option.

Many organisations retain deleted user licences indefinitely to preserve OneDrive data — this is expensive. Archive offers a cost-effective alternative.

Cost Comparison: 500 Former Employees, 5GB Average

Scenario A (licence retention): 500 users × $10/month licence cost = $5,000/month = $60,000/year
Scenario B (Archive): 500 × 5GB = 2,500GB × $0.05/month = $125/month = $1,500/year
Annual saving with Archive: $58,500/year

For multi-year retention (e.g., 7-year legal hold), the Archive cost advantage compounds significantly. A single EA negotiation focused on quantifying legacy data volumes and proposing Archive as a standard practice can unlock substantial savings.

Retention Policies vs. Backup: A Critical Distinction

This is where organisations and legal teams frequently become confused. Retention policies are not backup.

Purview Retention Policy Behavior on OneDrive

When a Purview (formerly Compliance) retention policy applies to OneDrive:

Backup vs. Retention: Complementary, Not Redundant

Regulated industries (healthcare, finance, legal) require both:

If a user deletes a file and it's past the recycle bin window, retention policies will preserve it in the hold library for legal purposes — but that file is still unrecoverable for operational use unless you have backup. Backup solves the operational problem; retention solves the compliance problem.

Third-Party Backup Tools: When They Make Sense

Microsoft 365 Backup is not the only option. Here's how the major alternatives compare:

When Third-Party Wins

For most organisations, Microsoft 365 Backup is sufficient and simpler to manage operationally.

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Negotiation Tactics

Your leverage in backup and archive licensing conversations centers on consumption commitment and volume consolidation:

M365 Backup Pricing Negotiation

Microsoft's list price is $0.15/GB/month on consumption. Your negotiating position: Commit to a minimum monthly data volume in exchange for a tiered rate. For example:

This commitment model gives Microsoft predictability and gives you pricing certainty. Volume growth is assumed annually (10–15%); the discount tier adjusts as consumption increases, but the base rate is locked.

Archive as a Licence Displacement Strategy

If you're currently retaining former employee licences for compliance, quantify the annual cost and present Archive as a replacement:

This creates a negotiation point in your EA renewal conversation. You're not asking for a discount on Archive (the price is already attractive) — you're asking Microsoft to recognize the licence displacement value and reinvest that $58,500 elsewhere in your agreement (e.g., compliance tools, developer licences).

E5 Compliance Overlap Consideration

If you're already purchasing M365 E5 with Purview compliance, audit whether you need M365 Backup or if retention policies alone meet your operational recovery SLAs. For most organisations, both are needed — but the conversation should happen explicitly rather than default-buying both.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Q1: Is OneDrive Files Restore the same as Microsoft 365 Backup?
No — they are different products. OneDrive Files Restore (included in E3/E5/Business licences at no extra charge) uses version history to detect mass file changes and allows users or admins to revert OneDrive to a point within the last 30 days. Microsoft 365 Backup is a separately licensed add-on ($0.15/GB/month) that provides a more robust backup infrastructure with admin-controlled, granular restore of individual files, folders, or full OneDrive accounts, independent of the version history system. Files Restore is reactive; M365 Backup is proactive.
Q2: What happens to OneDrive data when a user is deleted from M365?
By default, a deleted user's OneDrive is retained for 30 days before permanent deletion. Microsoft allows this retention period to be extended up to 365 days by maintaining a valid licence on the account. For long-term retention (e.g., legal hold or compliance requirements), Microsoft 365 Archive ($0.05/GB/month) is the cost-effective alternative to keeping a full user licence active. The break-even point is typically 6 months for most organisations.
Q3: Does M365 E5 include OneDrive backup?
No — M365 E5 includes advanced security, compliance, and analytics features, but does not include Microsoft 365 Backup. Backup is a separately purchased add-on regardless of which M365 SKU you hold. E5 includes Purview retention policies, which preserve content for compliance, but that is not the same as operational backup recovery. They serve different purposes and both may be needed.
Q4: How much does OneDrive backup typically cost for a 5,000-user organisation?
For 5,000 users with approximately 8GB average consumed OneDrive storage, Microsoft 365 Backup would cost approximately $0.15 × 40,000GB = $6,000/month = $72,000/year. This grows as OneDrive consumption increases (typically 10–15% annually). Organisations should baseline actual OneDrive consumption using Microsoft 365 admin centre reports before budgeting backup costs — per-user storage consumption varies enormously (some users consume 50GB, others use 500GB or more).
Q5: Can we use Purview retention policies instead of OneDrive Backup?
Not for operational recovery. Purview retention policies preserve content in a hidden Preservation Hold Library for compliance and eDiscovery — this content is not accessible to users or IT for normal recovery scenarios. If a user accidentally deletes files and they've left the recycle bin window, retention policies will not help retrieve them. Backup (either M365 Backup or third-party) is needed for operational recovery. Both serve different regulatory and operational requirements and should be implemented together in regulated industries.