What exactly is changing
In FY26 (beginning October 2025), Microsoft will introduce stricter authorisation criteria for partners who sell CSP directly (Direct Bill partners). The most notable update is a much higher revenue threshold. Direct Bill CSP partners must have at least USD$1 million in CSP revenue over the trailing 12 months (up from the current USD$300k). But revenue is just one piece. Microsoft is also adding new capability and compliance requirements.
Once the program updates take effect, Direct Bill partners will need to:
Cross a higher revenue bar:
Maintain > $1M in annual CSP billed revenue (trailing 12 months) by FY26.
Maintain support & security standards:
Have an active Microsoft Advanced Support for Partners (ASfP) or Premier Support plan and satisfy Microsoft’s Partner Center security requirements (e.g. achieving a passing security score).
Earn a Solutions Partner designation:
Attain at least one Microsoft Solutions Partner designation (e.g. Modern Work, Security, Azure) as evidence of advanced competencies.
Pass an annual operational assessment:
Complete Microsoft’s yearly CSP partner assessment of your billing, provisioning, support, compliance, and security capabilities.
For distributors (indirect providers), the bar is even higher – USD$30 million in CSP revenue per region – but our focus here is on direct partners. Meanwhile, the smallest tier (indirect resellers) will continue to have minimal requirements (e.g. a $1,000 TTM revenue floor and basic vetting/security).
In short, Microsoft is laying the foundations to ensure that well-resourced firms with the financial chops to invest at the speed of change are Direct Bill CSP partners. For smaller cloud partners, the opportunity is found in re-gearing business models to drive growth and success through distributors (and of course, SoftwareOne is a rock-solid place to call home).