Microsoft Office Mobile for iOS quietly launches in the US, requires Office 365 subscription

Microsoft Office Mobile for iPhone quietly launches, requires Office 365 subscription

After rumor upon leak suggested Microsoft was cooking up a release of Office for iOS, you’d think its arrival would be celebrated with streamers and cake. Making a rather low-key entrance, the app is now available to those with a small-screen iOS device and an Office 365 subscription. You can create new Excel and Word files from scratch, or view and edit spreadsheets, docs and Powerpoint files stored on Microsoft’s cloud services, or pinned to emails. Offline editing is also possible, as long as you’ve recently viewed or edited the file. You’ll also be able to see any files you recently accessed at home if your computer is running Office 2013. You’ll need an iPhone or iPod touch running iOS 6.1 (there’s no iPad version just yet), and the app is limited to the US at the moment, but head to the iTunes Store source link for the full feature list.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Update: Check out our hands-on.

Filed under: Cellphones, Internet, Software, Mobile, Apple, Microsoft

Comments

Source: iTunes Store, MS Office News blog, MS Office Technical blog

Related posts

Latest posts

Sam Altman doesn’t think Elon Musk is ‘a happy person’

OpenAI CEO had some strong words for his corporate nemesis, Elon Musk, during a Bloomberg TV interview Tuesday.

Microsoft Erases “Edge uninstall” page following user backlash

Microsoft get's rid of the "uninstall" documents that allegedly gave user instructions on how to uninstall the Edge browser.

You can preorder a GeForce RTX 50 series laptop on February 25

Nvidia has announced that RTX 50 series laptops will be available for preorder on February 25.

iFixit calls the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra “the most repairable Galaxy in years”

Although Samsung has a history of taking a more to repairing devices, it hasn’t always been an easy task. And in some cases, Samsung doesn’t take the view of third-party components. The has taken a step forward, as it the “most repairable Galaxy phone in years” in a recent press release. Here’s why. The Galaxy […]

This breakthrough holographic display could make AR glasses a reality in 2026

Swave's HXR chip could be the breakthrough we need to enjoy slim, lightweight, low-cost AR glasses without sacrificing quality or battery life.

Samsung Galaxy S25 users are not loving the new magnet case

Samsung Galaxy S25 owners say that the company's official magnet case is sorely lacking in magnetic strength and utility.

This HP ProBook laptop is normally $1,876 — today it’s $769

The HP ProBook 445, a reliable laptop with the AMD Ryzen 5 7535U processor and 16GB of RAM, is currently on sale from HP for only $769 following a 59% discount.

Thomson Reuters lands copyright win against AI company. What’s next?

An AI company lifted material from Thomson Reuters' research platform, arguing fair use and innocent infringement. A court has ruled it was copyright violation.

Annoying reboot bug hits Pixel 7 owners on Android 16 beta

Installing beta versions on Android phones can be tricky as users can encounter several bugs, and the latest evidence reaffirms

Android XR headsets will take a vital camera option from Android phones

As details slowly trickle in about Android XR, a VR veteran has revealed official Google info about how mixed-reality apps