Cara Download Microsoft Office 2016
Posted By admin On 19/05/19Nov 3, 2015 - Microsoft has released an update for Microsoft Office 2016 64-Bit Edition. This update provides the latest fixes to Microsoft Office 2016 64-Bit.
We're bringing together all the direct links to download official, genuine copies of a range of different versions of Microsoft's Office business suite. Refrain from using unofficial links as they may be honeypots to infect you will malware.
We've rechecked all the links as of the time of publishing this update to ensure that they're fully working. However, before you proceed, bear the following points in mind:
- Once trial versions expire, they will revert back to reduced functionality, essentially becoming file viewers. To get them to work again would require you to reinstall your Windows operating system – using a restore point or any similar image-based solution is unlikely to work.
- You will not need a product key to install the application but you will need one to activate the product.
- After you get a Microsoft ID, you will be able to activate the applications should you want to own the products outright with the product key card being the cheapest and usually fastest way of doing it.
- Some security applications might quarantine setup.exe forcing you to manually whitelist the appropriate files.
- In some cases the downloaded file will be an IMG format. If so, use 7-Zip or a similar archive utility to extract the files and run the relevant executable file (usually setup.exe).
- All the files linked are genuine and legal, direct from the developer. You will never be charged for downloading these files for backup purposes.
- If you have any suggestions or if you find that any of these are not working, do let us know.
The cheapest Office 365, Office 2013 and Office 2016 deals
Below are the cheapest versions we could find for all the various stock keeping units (note that prices and stocks will fluctuate). Oh and no loopholes please. Need more? See our full list of where to buy Microsoft office for the best price.
With Office 365, you can get your work done securely and communicate real-time from almost anywhere. Combining Office with Office 365 unlocks the full potential of Office 365 as the best solution for productivity, collaboration, communication, and worry-free IT. Buy the 1-device, 1-year Office 365 subscription for £43 at Amazon.
Microsoft Office 365 Home : was £79.99, now £67.48
Buy Microsoft Office 365 Home - 5 Users - 1 Year Subscription and get started with updated versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote, Publisher and Access plus get 1TB of online storage in OneDrive and Skype subscription. Order now for MS Office 365 Subscription and get Office 365 5-Users right away. For five PCs or Macs, 5 tablets including iPad, Android or Windows, plus five phones. Buy the 5-device, 1 year Office 365 subscription for £67.48 at Amazon.
Microsoft Office Home & Student 2016: was £99, now £84
Office Home and Student 2016 is made to help you achieve more with time-saving features, a new modern look, and built-in collaboration tools. Plus, you can save your documents in the cloud with OneDrive and access them from anywhere. You get the fully installed (perpetual) Office 2016 versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. Buy one licence for Microsoft Office Home and Student 2016 for £84 at Amazon.
Microsoft Office Home & Business 2016: was £199, now £171.54
Office Home and Business 2016 is made to help you achieve more with time-saving features, a modern look, built-in collaboration tools, and the power of Outlook for email, calendars, and contacts. Plus, you can save your documents in the cloud with OneDrive and access them from anywhere. You get the fully installed (perpetual) Office 2016 versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and OneNote. Buy one licence for Microsoft Office Home and Business 2016 for £171.54 at Amazon.
Microsoft Office Home & Business 2013: was £299, now £229
Office Home and Business 2013 is made to help you achieve more with time-saving features, a modern look, built-in collaboration tools, and the power of Outlook for email, calendars, and contacts. Plus, you can save your documents in the cloud with OneDrive and access them from anywhere. You get the fully installed (perpetual) Office 2013 versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and OneNote. Buy one licence for Microsoft Office Home and Business 2013 for £229 at Amazon.
Microsoft Office Home & Student 2013: was £99, now £59.90
Office Home and Student 2013 is made to help you achieve more with time-saving features, a modern look, built-in collaboration tools, and the power of Outlook for email, calendars, and contacts. Plus, you can save your documents in the cloud with OneDrive and access them from anywhere. You get the fully installed (perpetual) Office 2013 versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote. Buy one licence for Microsoft Office Home and Student 2013 for £59.90 at Amazon.
So, with all that in mind, let's get on with detailing the downloads…
Office 365 and Office 2016
When this article was first published, it was before the release of Office 2016 when you could download a preview version to try for free. Obviously post-release, that isn't the case anymore – and there's no trial version of Office 2016. Therefore if you want to try out Office for free, you'll need to dip into Office 365 (see above).
However, the below links we provided with the original article still work to download the installer for Office 2016 (this then grabs the Office 2016 setup files on-demand). Of course, be aware that obviously you will need a product key to successfully install the suite.
If Office 365 is what you're after, be aware that there is no offline installer for it. As is the case with Skype, you will get a tiny package that will then download the actual application.
Note that the trial period is only 30 days, and also a valid Microsoft account is a prerequisite for downloading the initial application. If you haven't got one, you'll need to set one up. You'll also need to provide payment info to partake of the free trial.
Microsoft provides with detailed notes on how to download and install or reinstall Office 365 or Office 2016 on a PC or Mac either in 32-bit or 64-bit mode.
- You might want to read our review of Office 2016 and read our review of Office 365
Office 2013
This is the RTM/final version that can be used for 30 days without any limitations (i.e. it is a trial version). The suite includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook, Access, Infopath, Visio viewer, Publisher and Lync. Note that the linked files below are reasonably large downloads; 667MB and 769MB respectively. (And should you wish to read it, you'll find our review of Office 2013 here).
Office for Mac 2011, Office 2010 and Office 2007
Microsoft quietly took down all its download servers that used to house hundreds of ISO files, many of them on Digitalriver. This means that you won't be able to download offline installers legally for Office 2010, Office for Mac 2011 and Office 2007.
As such, there are no legal ways of providing a direct download route to Office 2007 – the only way you can get a download copy is by using the linked Office 2007 download URL for free and entering your product key which will then pull the qualifying Office 2007 product.
For Office 2010, if you have been issued with a PIN post-purchase (on a product key card), you can download it directly from the getmicrosoftkey website.
- Read our reviews of Office 2010 and Office 2007
Office Mobile apps
These are apps for Word, Excel and PowerPoint, along with Outlook and OneNote, all of which have been optimised for touch and mobile devices which means that you won't need a mouse and a keyboard to use them.
However, you will need to have Windows 10 installed to run them and clicking on the links below will open Store, Microsoft's equivalent of Google Play, to download the required file. You won't be able to sideload them or download them as a discrete package. Your OS will determine the type of file to download (32-bit or 64-bit or ARM).
In a previous article here at Experts Exchange, I explained how to install Microsoft Office Picture Manager 2010 with Office 2013. This was necessitated by Microsoft's removal of Picture Manager from the Office 2013 suite — it had been included in Office 2003, Office 2007, and Office 2010. Many users, this author included, had high hopes that the folks at Microsoft would include it in Office 2016/Office 365, but they did not.
Microsoft's position on this is that Windows Photo Gallery (previously called Windows Live Photo Gallery), which supersedes Picture Manager, has the same functionality as Picture Manager, and more. Whether that's true or not, many users still prefer Picture Manager, and if you went straight from Office 2010 (or earlier) to Office 2016/Office 365, you may be surprised and disappointed to find that it is missing. This article explains how to install Picture Manager with Office 2016/Office 365.
Having mentioned Office 365, let's take a detour on that. Office 365 has a subscription (recurring) licensing model, while Office 2016 has a perpetual (one-time) licensing model. Currently, one of the Office 365 subscriptions (Office 365 Business Essentials) has only web versions of the Office modules, while the other Office 365 subscriptions (Office 365 Business, Office 365 Business Premium, Office 365 Home, and Office 365 Personal) have both web versions and Office 2016 desktop versions. The various plans contain different Office modules and have different costs. I am not documenting the plans or even providing URLs in this article, as I expect Microsoft to change the plans and the links over time. When you're ready to move forward with an Office 365 subscription, a web search for 'office 365' will certainly find the latest plans and prices. In the meantime, if you want to experiment with a free, one-month trial of Office 365, including the Office 2016 desktop apps, I published two video Micro Tutorials here are at Experts Exchange that should be helpful:
While many of the Office 365 subscriptions currently (and surely will in the future) contain desktop versions of Office 2016 modules, Picture Manager is not currently (and almost surely will not be in the future) included with any Office 365 subscriptions. This, of course, makes perfect sense, since it isn't even an Office 2016 module! However, installing it as described in this article will work alongside both the web and desktop versions of the Office 2016 modules that are part of Office 365 subscriptions.
Back from the Office 365 detour, let's continue with the installation of Picture Manager. As mentioned in my previous article, Picture Manager is a component of SharePoint Designer 2010, which is available as a free download at the Microsoft site:
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64-bit
The 32-bit/64-bit distinction refers to the bit-level of your Office applications, not the bit-level of your Windows. For this article, I used my system that contains the 32-bit Office 2016 apps that were installed as part of the Office 365 subscription in the two video Micro Tutorials mentioned earlier (on 64-bit Windows 7).
Note that Picture Manager is not a component of SharePoint Designer 2013. Furthermore, Microsoft announced at the Ignite 2015 conference that there will not be a SharePoint Designer 2016, i.e., SharePoint Designer 2013 is the final release of that product. This means that SharePoint Designer 2010 is the last version to contain Picture Manager.
After downloading the correct bit-level for your Office environment, run the SharePoint Designer 2010 setup program. You will see the license agreement, which I recommend reading in its entirety, but the key term is this:
1. INSTALLATION AND USE RIGHTS. You may install and use any number of copies of the software on your devices.
Acceptance of the license agreement will result in a legal installation of Picture Manager, i.e., one that is in license compliance.
Continue with the setup wizard and you'll see this:
Click the Customize installation button and in the Installation Options tab, click the drop-down arrow in all three main areas under Microsoft Office, selecting Not Available:
After selecting Not Available in all three main sections (Microsoft SharePoint Designer, Office Shared Features, Office Tools), you'll have this:
Now Expand Office Tools by clicking the plus sign and you'll see Microsoft Office Picture Manager. This is the only component that you need to install. Click the drop-down arrow next to Microsoft Office Picture Manager and select Run from My Computer, causing the red X to disappear. Then click the Install Now button:
The installer will run and you will receive the installation completed dialog:
Here's what my Office program groups looked like before the Picture Manager installation:
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Here's what they look like afterwards:
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There's a new Microsoft Office group next to the Microsoft Office 2016 group and it contains Microsoft Office Picture Manager, which works alongside the Office 2016/Office 365 applications:
Note that the method in this article does not rely on having Office 2016 installed — or any version of Microsoft Office installed. So, for example, if you have another office suite, such as LibreOffice or OpenOffice, but still wish to have Picture Manager, this technique will work fine. In fact, it will work with no office suite installed.
Article Update on 15-January-2017: My thanks to reader Roberto Bertolini, who was kind enough to provide some screenshots showing what happened during his installation on Windows 10. First, here's his screenshot of the Installation Progress dialog:
Second, here's his screenshot of the dialog showing the choices for the update settings:
Third, here's his screenshot of the W10 Start Menu with the new Picture Manager program group:
Thanks again to Roberto for sharing. I've updated the article in the hopes that it will help other members during installation.
If you find this article to be helpful, please click the thumbs-up icon below. This lets me know what is valuable for EE members and provides direction for future articles. Thanks very much! Regards, Joe