Many Canadian businesses and IT teams are paying more for Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 licenses than they need to—and most have no idea. With substantial price adjustments coming for Microsoft 365 in July 2026 and increased complexity in how AI add-ons and storage are billed in both ecosystems, now is the critical moment to review your cloud productivity spend. By conducting a smart, thorough licensing audit, you can reduce costs, align IT spend with business requirements, and avoid being caught off guard by vendor pricing changes.
If your organization hasn't audited its licensing in the last year, you may be carrying unused, misaligned, or overpriced licenses or paying unnecessarily for premium features a fraction of your team actually uses. Interlock IT, as Canada's leading cloud services partner, has guided thousands of small and medium businesses through this process, and we've seen savings from simple adjustments in nearly every scenario.
Understanding Cloud Productivity Licensing in 2026
Cloud suites like Google Workspace and Microsoft 365 are now the backbone of nearly all business communication and collaboration in Canada. Their pricing models, bundled features, and storage policies have changed rapidly since 2025, especially as AI capabilities were added as stand-alone charges. A modern audit requires close attention to these factors:
Price Increases: Microsoft 365 prices are scheduled to rise considerably on July 1, 2026, affecting all business plans and annual commitments.
Google Workspace Stability: Google’s 2026 pricing is more predictable, following AI feature price increases in 2025.
AI Add-on Complexity: Both providers now offer multiple paid tiers for AI features, creating hidden costs when not properly managed.
How Overpayment Happens: Key Traps
License Misalignment: Many organizations assign premium licenses to staff who don't need them, or ignore downgrades when user roles change.
Storage Model Differences: Google Workspace’s pooled storage (e.g., 2TB/user shared across the company) can be far more cost-effective than Microsoft’s siloed approach (1TB per user, no sharing). Failing to account for this can trigger expensive upgrades or add-ons in Microsoft 365 environments.
AI and Add-on Overpurchase: Assigning AI licenses like Gemini or Copilot to every user instead of just those who benefit most leads to massive budget waste.
User or License Creep: Old, unused, or duplicate accounts often remain licensed long after offboarding, especially in companies that have gone through fast growth or layoffs.
Definition: Cloud Licensing Audit
A cloud productivity license audit is a comprehensive review of all paid licenses, feature assignments, and storage usage for your business’s Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 environment. The goal is to ensure every user is matched to the most cost-effective plan based on their job requirements and usage, while identifying redundant or unused add-ons.
Step-by-Step Audit Framework from Interlock IT
Inventory All Licenses and Users
Extract a report from your admin console. Document license type per user, role, and department. Check for unassigned or duplicate accounts.
Analyze Storage and Feature Requirements
Determine actual storage consumption company-wide. In Google Workspace, oversized users can be offset by lower-usage colleagues thanks to pooled storage. In Microsoft 365, identify users nearing their storage limit—these will be candidates for upgrades or more critical file cleanup.
Audit AI and Paid Add-ons
List all add-on items assigned (e.g., Gemini, Copilot, additional security). Cross-check against job needs. Many businesses realize only a portion of staff requires these premium features.
Compare User Job Functions with Assigned Tiers
Create a matrix mapping job functions (finance, sales, operations, design) to required features. Most organizations uncover dozens of misaligned assignments in this step alone.
Review Subscription Contract Terms
Document renewal dates, annual or monthly commitments, and potential penalties for reduction or platform change—especially in light of Microsoft's July 2026 increase. These details will influence when and how to act.
2026 Pricing Overview: Google Workspace vs. Microsoft 365
Note: AI add-ons (e.g., Gemini, Copilot) are charged separately and can cost $20-$31.50/month per user. Assigning these only to power users is critical for cost efficiency.
Unlocking Savings: What Interlock IT Finds in Most Audits
Finance, admin, or HR staff often assigned to premium plans unnecessarily
AI licenses overprovisioned—most employees rarely use advanced AI features
Duplicate users and abandoned mailboxes linger from old hires and restructuring
Disjointed storage strategies result in preventable overages in Microsoft 365 environments, rather than leveraging pooled plans in Google Workspace
Key Metrics to Track for Ongoing Optimization
Storage Utilization Rate: Percentage of allocated storage used. If over 80%, review for excess files or consider plan upgrades for select users or a pooled model.
License Alignment Score: Percent of users matched correctly to job role. Aim for 90%+ alignment.
Add-on Utilization: For each paid feature, actively monitor usage per user.
Contract Renewal Dashboard: Keep a calendar of all upcoming renewals for negotiation or switching windows, particularly alerting to July 1, 2026 for Microsoft 365 increases.
Best Practices for License Management
Conduct quarterly audits, adjusting tiers and add-ons with changing roles and projects
Set up automated deprovisioning to catch unused or duplicate accounts quickly
Periodically train department leads to request only what’s necessary for their team members
Keep a record of contract terms, penalty schedules, and annual or monthly renewal windows
Engage a professional licensing review from Interlock IT to benchmark your environment against best practices and uncover hidden savings
When Should You Consider Switching Platforms?
If siloed storage in Microsoft 365 is causing persistent overages, pooled storage in Google Workspace can provide instant savings for data-heavy departments
Approaching renewal offers leverage for major renegotiation or migration without incurring extra fees
Massive overprovisioning of premium licenses or AI features, particularly after org restructuring
Want to eliminate multiple redundant productivity tools and consolidate under a single suite
FAQ: Common Questions About License Audits and Cloud Productivity Costs
What is a license audit for Google Workspace or Microsoft 365?
A license audit is a structured review of all users, license tiers, storage, and paid add-ons in your business's cloud environment. The goal is to match each individual to the right plan and eliminate waste.
How often should I review my license allocation?
Quarterly reviews are ideal, but at minimum, schedule an audit before annual renewals, after major hiring or exits, or when new features (like AI) are rolled out.
How can I tell if I am overpaying?
If you haven’t downgraded licenses after role changes, assigned AI features broadly rather than based on need, or repeatedly purchase additional storage in Microsoft 365, you are likely overpaying. An audit will clarify what’s misaligned.
What is the impact of Microsoft's July 2026 price increase?
Many Canadian businesses will see significant jumps in their Microsoft 365 bills. Understanding your renewal dates and current agreements is essential to forecast true future costs and to decide whether to renegotiate or switch platforms.
Conclusion: Take Action to Own Your License Spend
Cloud licensing, when managed proactively, is one of the easiest IT wins for Canadian businesses in 2026. A well-timed audit will prevent you from absorbing unexpected vendor price hikes or paying for features and storage you don't use. Start with an internal review using the steps provided. For a deeper analysis, a professional audit by Interlock IT offers cost-saving recommendations, and peace of mind as pricing shifts loom.
If you have questions or want a no-obligation review of your Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 environment, contact Interlock IT today. We’ll help you ensure your cloud IT spend is driving value, not waste.