Microsoft 365 Sharepoint



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Learn about the service limits in SharePoint for Microsoft 365.

Limits by plan

FeatureMicrosoft 365 Business Basic, Business Standard, or Business PremiumMicrosoft 365 E3 or E5, Office 365 E1, E3, or E5, or SharePoint Plan 1 or 2Microsoft 365 F1 or F3, Office 365 F3
Total storage per organization1, 2, 6
1 TB plus 10 GB per license purchased3
1 TB plus 10 GB per license purchased3
1 TB3
Max storage per site (site collection)4
25 TB
25 TB
25 TB5
Sites (site collections) per organization
2 million6
2 million6
2 million
Number of users
Up to 300
1- 500,0007
1- 500,0007
  • Register to attend multiple workshops about SharePoint, Microsoft 365, Office 365, Microsoft Teams, Microsoft 365, Power Apps & Power Automate (Flow), and Power Platform. Virtual workshop participants will have 30 days of access to workshop materials as well as the recording of the live workshop.
  • Microsoft 365 PnP – General Developer SIG recording – 4th of March, 20. Demos: 1) List formatting fundamentals, 2) Exporting SharePoint site structures/documentation to Markdown, and 3) New SP Editor chrome exten.

SharePoint powers your intranet throughout your connected workplace. And now is the time to modernize it building with SharePoint and Microsoft 365 – to reimagine the role of the intranet, powering employee experiences that inform, organize and engage employees and harness collective knowledge. Get the essential productivity tools that just keep getting better with Microsoft 365. SharePoint Online is a hosted solution that you can get by itself or with a Microsoft 365 subscription. SharePoint Server 2019 is an on-premises solution. See Microsoft 365 plans and pricing.

I have an Office 365 Home Premium account. I would like to have a SharePoint site to organize my information, etc. I don't particularly like SkyDrive. (I use SharePoint at the office and am very familiar with SharePoint. My question is, can I get SharePoint as a home user? It seems to only be available to small businesses.

1Learn how to find the total and available storage for your organization. You can purchase an unlimited amount of additional SharePoint storage. See Add storage space for your subscription.
2 We recommend monitoring the Recycle Bin and emptying it regularly. The storage space it uses is part of the organization's total storage limit.
3 If you have a Microsoft 365 subscription and an Office 365 Extra File Storage add-on, the storage amounts are added.
4 This is the storage limit for a single site (previously called 'site collection'), not the amount of storage provided for each site. This limit applies to all types of sites, including Office 365 group-connected team sites and OneDrive. SharePoint admins can manually set lower storage limits.
5 Firstline Workers can't administer SharePoint sites.
6 Not including the OneDrive created for each licensed user.
7 If you have more than 500,000 users, contact a Microsoft representative.

Service limits for all plans

Items in lists and libraries

A list can have up to 30 million items and a library can have up to 30 million files and folders. When a list, library, or folder contains more than 100,000 items, you can't break permissions inheritance on the list, library, or folder. Nor can you re-inherit permissions on it. However, you can still break inheritance on the individual items within that list, library, or folder, up to the maximum number of unique permissions in the list or library (see the next section). To learn more about other restrictions for viewing large lists, see Manage large lists and libraries in Office 365.

Unique security scopes per list or library

For large lists, design to have as few unique permissions as possible and remain below 5,000 in total.

File size and file path length

250 GB. To learn more about restrictions and limits when using the new OneDrive sync app (OneDrive.exe), see Invalid file names and file types.

Moving and copying across sites

Copying/Moving multiple files in a single operation has three requirements:

  • No more than 100 GB total file size
  • No more than 30,000 files
  • Each file must be less than 15 GB

Sync

For optimum performance, we recommend storing no more than 300,000 files in a single OneDrive or team site library. Although SharePoint Online can store 30 million documents per library, for optimum performance we recommend syncing no more than 300,000 files across all document libraries. Additionally, the same performance issues can occur if you have 300,000 items or more across all libraries you are syncing, even if you are not syncing all items in those libraries. If you use the previous OneDrive for Business sync client (Groove.exe), the sync limit per library is 20,000 items (including 5,000 items per team site).

Versions

50,000 major versions and 511 minor versions.

SharePoint groups

A user can belong to 5,000 groups per site (site collection), and each group can have up to 5,000 users. You can have up to 10,000 groups per site (site collection).

Note

For Azure AD group limits, see Azure AD service limits and restrictions as such limits can impact public and private group sites membership management.

Managed metadata

1 million total terms, having a total of 2 million term labels and 1 million term properties (these limits are for global & site-level terms combined). 1,000 global term sets and 1,000 global groups.

Overall site metadata

1000 GB per site (metadata rarely reaches this size).

Subsites

2,000 per site (site collection). We recommend creating sites and organizing them into hubs instead of creating subsites. If you do use subsites, we recommend limiting their number (especially on heavily trafficked sites).

Note

Tutorial

Your organization is limited to 2,000 hub sites. You might not need a hub site for every function, and it's important to do some planning before you create hubs. For more information, please visit Planning your SharePoint hub sites.

SharePoint hosted applications

20,000 instances per organization.

Users

2 million per site collection.

Note

There is no distinct limit to the number of guests you can invite to SharePoint sites. For more information about external sharing, see External sharing overview.

See also

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The external sharing features of Microsoft SharePoint let users in your organization share content with people outside the organization (such as partners, vendors, clients, or customers). You can also use external sharing to share between licensed users on multiple Microsoft 365 subscriptions if your organization has more than one subscription. External sharing in SharePoint is part of secure collaboration with Microsoft 365.

Planning for external sharing should be included as part of your overall permissions planning for SharePoint in Microsoft 365. This article describes what happens when users share, depending on what they're sharing and with whom.

If you want to get straight to setting up sharing, choose the scenario you want to enable:

(If you're trying to share a file or folder, see Share OneDrive files and folders or Share SharePoint files or folders in Microsoft 365.)

Microsoft 365 Sharepoint Training

Note

External sharing is turned on by default for your entire SharePoint environment and the sites in it. You may want to turn it off globally before people start using sites or until you know exactly how you want to use the feature.

How the external sharing settings work

SharePoint has external sharing settings at both the organization level and the site level (previously called the 'site collection' level). To allow external sharing on any site, you must allow it at the organization level. You can then restrict external sharing for other sites. If a site's external sharing option and the organization-level sharing option don't match, the most restrictive value will always be applied.

Whichever option you choose at the organization or site level, the more restrictive functionality is still available. For example, if you choose to allow unauthenticated sharing using 'Anyone' links (previously called 'shareable' links or 'anonymous access' links), users can still share with guests, who sign in, and with internal users.

Important

Even if your organization-level setting allows external sharing, not all new sites allow it by default. The default sharing setting for Microsoft 365 group-connected team sites is 'New and existing guests.' The default for communication sites and classic sites is 'Only people in your organization.'

Security and privacy

If you have confidential information that should never be shared externally, we recommend storing the information in a site that has external sharing turned off. Create additional sites as needed to use for external sharing. This helps you to manage security risk by preventing external access to sensitive information.

Note

To limit internal sharing of contents on a site, you can prevent site members from sharing, and enable access requests. For info, see Set up and manage access requests.

When users share a folder with multiple guests, the guests will be able to see each other's names in the Manage Access panel for the folder (and any items within it).

Sharing Microsoft 365 group-connected team sites

When you or your users create Microsoft 365 groups (for example in Outlook, or by creating a team in Microsoft Teams), a SharePoint team site is created. Admins and users can also create team sites in SharePoint, which creates a Microsoft 365 group. For group-connected team sites, the group owners are added as site owners, and the group members are added as site members. In most cases, you'll want to share these sites by adding people to the Microsoft 365 group. However, you can share only the site.

Important

It's important that all group members have permission to access the team site. If you remove the group's permission, many collaboration tasks (such as sharing files in Teams chats) won't work. Only add guests to the group if you want them to be able to access the site. For info about guest access to Microsoft 365 groups, see Manage guest access in Groups.

What happens when users share

When users share with people outside the organization, an invitation is sent to the person in email, which contains a link to the shared item.

Recipients who sign in

When users share sites, recipients will be prompted to sign in with:

  • A Microsoft account
  • A work or school account in Azure AD from another organization

When users share files and folders, recipients will also be prompted to sign in if they have:

  • A Microsoft account

These recipients will typically be added to your directory as guests, and then permissions and groups work the same for these guests as they do for internal users. (To ensure that all guests are added to your directory, use the SharePoint and OneDrive integration with Azure AD B2B.)

Because these guests do not have a license in your organization, they are limited to basic collaboration tasks:

  • They can use Office.com for viewing and editing documents. If your plan includes Office Professional Plus, they can't install the desktop version of Office on their own computers unless you assign them a license.

  • They can perform tasks on a site based on the permission level that they've been given. For example, if you add a guest as a site member, they will have Edit permissions and they will be able to add, edit and delete lists; they will also be able to view, add, update and delete list items and files.

  • They will be able to see other types of content on sites, depending on the permissions they've been given. For example, they can navigate to different subsites within a shared site. They will also be able to do things like view site feeds.

If your authenticated guests need greater capability such as OneDrive storage or creating a Power Automate flow, you must assign them an appropriate license. To do this, sign in to the Microsoft 365 admin center as a global admin, make sure the Preview is off, go to the Active users page, select the guest, click More, and then click Edit product licenses.

Recipients who provide a verification code

When users share files or folders, recipients will be asked to enter a verification code if they have:

  • A work or school account in Azure AD from another organization
  • An email address that isn't a Microsoft account or a work or school account in Azure AD

If the recipient has a work or school account, they only need to enter the code the first time. Then they will be added as a guest and can sign in with their organization's user name and password.

If the recipient doesn't have a work or school account, they need to use a code each time they access the file or folder, and they are not added to your directory.

Note

Sites can't be shared with people unless they have a Microsoft account or a work or school account in Azure AD.

Recipients who don't need to authenticate

Microsoft 365 Sharepoint Tutorial

Anyone with the link (inside or outside your organization) can access files and folders without having to sign in or provide a code. These links can be freely passed around and are valid until the link is deleted or expires (if you've set an expiration date). You cannot verify the identity of the people using these links, but their IP address is recorded in audit logs when they access or edit shared content.

Microsoft 365 Sharepoint Training

People who access files and folders through 'Anyone' links aren't added to your organization's directory, and you can't assign them licenses. They also can't access sites using an 'Anyone' link. They can only view or edit the specific file or folder for which they have an 'Anyone' link.

Stopping sharing

You can stop sharing with guests by removing their permissions from the shared item, or by removing them as a guest in your directory.

You can stop sharing with people who have an 'Anyone' link by going to the file or folder that you shared and deleting the link.

Need more help?

If you have technical questions about this topic, you may find it helpful to post them on the SharePoint discussion forum. It's a great resource for finding others who have worked with similar issues or who have encountered the same situation.

You can also find help on security and permissions in these YouTube videos from SharePoint community experts.

See also