Microsoft Publisher’s Days Are Numbered – Here’s What You Need to Know
After more than three decades, Microsoft Publisher is being phased out, as Word and PowerPoint absorb its functionality. Microsoft has now confirmed that Publisher will officially be removed from Microsoft 365 in October 2026, and support for its perpetual version will be discontinued at that time.
For Publisher users, this means two things: If you’re a Microsoft 365 subscriber, you will lose access to the app entirely after the 2026 deadline. If you own a perpetual license, the software will continue to work, but Microsoft will no longer provide updates or security fixes. This could leave Publisher vulnerable to future threats, and users will be left with an unsupported, outdated application.
Why is Microsoft making this move? The company’s official support page explains that Word and PowerPoint have essentially taken over Publisher’s role. Microsoft is now guiding Publisher users to Word for letterheads and envelopes and either Word or PowerPoint for designing business cards and other creative documents. With these tools now offering similar or enhanced layout and design features, Publisher’s relevance has steadily diminished.
Microsoft is advising current Publisher users to transition their files before the discontinuation date. However, the process is cumbersome. To convert .pub files, users need to save them as PDFs and then open them in Word or PowerPoint. The downside? Layouts may shift during conversion, requiring manual adjustments. For those with extensive archives of Publisher files, Microsoft suggests using macros to automate the process, though this adds another layer of complexity.
Microsoft Publisher has had a long run, first debuting in 1991 and later integrating into Office 365/Microsoft 365. However, many users ultimately gravitated toward Word’s text handling and PowerPoint’s design flexibility, making Publisher redundant. As it nears its 35th anniversary, its role in Microsoft’s ecosystem has come to an end. While it was never as universally embraced as Word, Excel, or PowerPoint, its dedicated user base will now have to transition to new tools—or keep using an unsupported app after 2026.
Farewell, Publisher. You won’t be forgotten—but you also won’t be updated.