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Azure Active Directory editions

Updated: September 11, 2015

Applies To: Azure, Azure Active Directory, Office 365

Important

Please bear with us as we migrate this and other content to the Microsoft Azure website. This topic is no longer being updated and might become out of date. Please bookmark the updated Azure article on this subject, Azure Active Directory editions.

Azure Active Directory is a service that provides comprehensive identity and access management capabilities in the cloud. It combines directory services, advanced identity governance, application access management and a rich standards-based platform for developers. For more information, see this video.

Built on top of a large set of free capabilities in Microsoft Azure Active Directory, Azure Active Directory Premium and Basic editions provide a set of more advanced features to empower enterprises with more demanding identity and access management needs. For the pricing options for these editions, see Azure Active Directory Pricing. When you subscribe to Azure, you get your choice of the following free and paid editions of Azure Active Directory:

  • Free - The Free edition of Azure Active Directory is part of every Azure subscription. There is nothing to license and nothing to install. With it, you can manage user accounts, synchronize with on-premises directories, get single sign-on across Azure, Office 365, and thousands of popular SaaS applications like Salesforce, Workday, Concur, DocuSign, Google Apps, Box, ServiceNow, Dropbox, and more.

  • Basic - Azure Active Directory Basic edition provides application access and self-service identity management requirements for task workers with cloud-first needs. With the Basic edition of Azure Active Directory, you get all the capabilities that Azure Active Directory Free has to offer, plus group-based access management, self-service password reset for cloud applications, Azure Active Directory application proxy (to publish on-premises web applications using Azure Active Directory), customizable environment for launching enterprise and consumer cloud applications, and an enterprise-level SLA of 99.9 percent uptime.

    An administrator with Azure Active Directory Basic edition can also activate an Azure Active Directory Premium trial.

  • Premium - With the Premium edition of Azure Active Directory, you get all of the capabilities that the Azure Active Directory Free and Basic editions have to offer, plus additional feature-rich enterprise-level identity management capabilities explained below.

To sign up and start using Active Directory Premium today, see Getting started with Azure Active Directory Premium.

Note

Azure Active Directory Premium and Azure Active Directory Basic are not currently supported in China. Please contact us at the Azure Active Directory Forum for more information.

Features in Azure Active Directory Basic

Active Directory Basic edition is a paid offering of Azure Active Directory and includes all of the features of the Free edition plus the following features:

  • Company branding – To make the end user experience even better, you can add your company logo and color schemes to your organization’s Sign In and Access Panel pages. Once you’ve added your logo, you also have the option to add localized versions of the logo for different languages and locales.

    For more information, see Add company branding to your Sign In and Access Panel pages.

  • Group-based application access – Use groups to provision users and assign user access in bulk to thousands of SaaS applications. These groups can either be created solely in the cloud or you can leverage existing groups that have been synced in from your on-premises Active Directory.

    For more information, see Assign access for a group to a SaaS application in Azure AD.

  • Self-service password reset – Azure has always allowed directory administrators to reset passwords. With Azure Active Directory Basic, you can now reduce helpdesk calls when your users forget a password by giving all users in your directory the capability to reset their password, using the same sign in experience they have for Office 365.

    For more information, see Password Management in Azure AD.

  • Enterprise SLA of 99.9% - We guarantee at least 99.9% availability of the Azure Active Directory Basic service.

  • Azure Active Directory Application Proxy - Give your employees secure access to on-premises applications like SharePoint and Exchange/OWA from the cloud using Azure Active Directory.

Features in Azure Active Directory Premium

Active Directory Premium edition is a paid offering of Azure Active Directory and includes all of the features of the Free and Basic editions plus the following features:

  • Self-service group management - Azure Active Directory Premium simplifies day-to-day administration of groups by enabling users to create groups, request access to other groups, delegate group ownership so others can approve requests and maintain their group’s memberships.

    For more information, see Self-service group management for users in Azure AD.

  • Advanced security reports and alerts – Monitor and protect access to your cloud applications by viewing detailed logs showing more advanced anomalies and inconsistent access pattern reports. Advanced reports are machine learning-based and can help you gain new insights to improve access security and respond to potential threats.

    For more information, see View your access and usage reports.

  • Multi-Factor Authentication - Multi-Factor Authentication is now included with Premium and can help you to secure access to on-premises applications (VPN, RADIUS, etc.), Azure, Microsoft Online Services like Office 365 and Dynamics CRM Online, and thousands of Non-MS Cloud services preintegrated with Azure Active Directory. Simply enable Multi-Factor Authentication for Azure Active Directory identities, and users will be prompted to set up additional verification the next time they sign in.

    For more information, see Adding Multi-Factor Authentication to Azure Active Directory.

  • Microsoft Identity Manager (MIM) - Premium comes with the option to grant rights to use a MIM server (and CALs) in your on-premises network to support any combination of Hybrid Identity solutions. This is a great option if you have a variation of on-premises directories and databases that you want to sync directly to Azure Active Directory. There is no limit on the number of FIM servers you can use, however, MIM CALs are granted based on the allocation of an Azure Active Directory premium user license.

    For more information, see Deploy MIM 2010 R2.

  • Enterprise SLA of 99.9% - We guarantee at least 99.9% availability of the Azure Active Directory Premium service.

    For more information, see Active Directory Premium SLA.

  • Password reset with write-back - self-service password reset can be written back to on-premises directories.

  • Azure Active Directory Connect Health: monitor the health of your on-premises Active Directory infrastructure and get usage analytics.

Comparing Free, Basic, and Premium editions

Azure Active Directory Basic and Azure Active Directory Premium have more advanced capabilities to help streamline enterprise-level administrative tasks and make an administrator’s life easier. The following table describes common admin benefits and how signing up for Azure Active Directory Basic or Azure Active Directory Premium help simplify them.

  Features Free edition Basic edition Premium edition

Common features

Directory as a service

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Up to 500K objects1

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No object limit

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No object limit

User and group management using UI or Windows PowerShell cmdlets

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Device registration

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Access Panel portal for SSO-based user access to SaaS and custom applications

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Up to 10 apps per user2

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Up to 10 apps per user2

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No app limit

User-based application access management and provisioning

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Self-service password change for cloud users

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Azure AD Connect – For syncing between on-premises directories and Azure Active Directory

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Standard security reports

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Premium and Basic features

High availability SLA uptime (99.9%)

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Group-based application access management and provisioning

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Customization of company logo and colors to the Sign In and Access Panel pages

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Self-service password reset for cloud users

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Application Proxy: Secure Remote Access and SSO to on-premises web applications

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Premium-only features

Advanced application usage reporting

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Self-service group management for cloud users

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Self-service password reset with on-premises write-back

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Microsoft Identity Manager (MIM) user licenses – For on-premises identity and access management

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Advanced anomaly security reports (machine learning-based)

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Cloud app discovery

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Multi-Factor Authentication service for cloud users

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Multi-Factor Authentication server for on-premises users

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Azure Active Directory Connect Health to monitor the health of on-premises Active Directory infrastructure, and get usage analytics.

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1 The 500k object limit does not apply for Office 365, Microsoft Intune or any other Microsoft online service that relies on Azure Active Directory for directory services.

2 With Azure Active Directory Free and Azure Active Directory Basic, end users who have been assigned access to each SaaS app, can see up to 10 apps in their Access Panel and get SSO access to them (assuming they have first been configured with SSO by the admin). Admins can configure SSO and assign user access to as many SaaS apps as they want with Free, however end users will only see 10 apps in their Access Panel at a time.

3 Microsoft Identity Manager Server software rights are granted with Windows Server licenses (any edition). Because Microsoft Identity Manager runs on the Windows Server operating system, as long as the server is running a valid, licensed copy of Windows Server, then Microsoft Identity Manager can be installed and used on that server. No other separate license is required for Microsoft Identity Manager Server.

Features currently in public preview

The following features are currently in public preview and will be added soon:

  • Administrative units: a new Azure Active Directory container of resources that can be used for delegating administrative permissions over subsets of users and applying policies to a subset of users.

  • Add your own SaaS applications to Azure Active Directory.

  • Password rollover for Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. For more information, read this article.

  • Dynamic group membership. For more information, see this article.

  • Conditional Access: Multifactor Authentication per application.

  • HR application integration: Workday

  • Privileged Identity Management: Privileged identity management provides improved oversight to help meet service level agreements and regulatory compliance requirements.

  • Self-service application requests: Administrators can provide a list of SaaS apps to users from which so that users can choose the ones they want to use, and the apps either will be available immediately or after approval.

  • Azure reporting API: data for every security report of Azure Active Directory will be available to other monitoring or SIEM tools.

See Also

Concepts

Getting started with Azure Active Directory Premium

Other Resources

Azure Active Directory Service Description
Azure Active Directory Pricing Details
Azure Active Directory documentation