On their web page, there is no SLA for accounts less than 50000 or authentication under 50000. I understand that why because it is free. But what if we have small user base but we want SLA?
I understand that why because it is free. But what if we have small user base but we want SLA?
What do you mean about the free? As far as I know, there is no SLA is provided for the Free tier of Azure Active Directory B2C, the SLA describes Microsoft’s commitments for uptime and connectivity. If your B2C can support SLA, you could try this with small users. For the details, you could read SLA for Azure Active Directory B2C.
Direct Azure Customer: There is a free tier available. But for Enterprise Agreement Customer, there is no Free Tier and SLA is effect when there is no Free Tier.
Related
Looking for some official Microsoft documentations about Azure Active Directory tier/license types and its limitations but no luck
Is there Basic tier of Azure Active Directory still available or
retired?
What is maximum number of users can be stored in Azure Active
Directory tier wise?
Tier wise pricing of Azure Active Directory
Tier wise SLA details
Not sure details provided here are still valid & true to consider it as reference.
Basic no longer exists. The Free edition is included with a subscription of a commercial online service, e.g. Azure, Dynamics 365, Intune, and Power Platform.
See Service Limits and Feature Comparison Docs
See Pricing for Azure AD
See Azure AD SLA
Good afternoon,
I am confused about licensing in Azure and I am hoping someone here can help me understand. Regrettably, Microsoft was not particularly helpful when I contacted sales.
I have an on-prem AD synced with Azure AD cloud (free edition). We have a number of guests (for purposes of this question, 10) for Teams access, and I would like to implement an MFA requirement for them. It appears Azure AD premium licensing may be required to do this. If it is, does each guest user need an Azure AD Premium P1 or P2 license assigned (so 10 Azure AD Px licenses)? Or do I just need one for the administrator?
I'm finding the licensing portion confusing.
Thank you.
The licensing agreement requires that every user using Azure MFA needs at least a Premium P1 license. (See related discussion.)
If you are using the free version with security defaults enabled, then you can use a subset of the MFA features and the users can only authenticate using the Authenticator app. But you won't be able to use conditional access or have MFA turned on for some users and not others.
I have two account Azure FREE MSDN account and Azure Enterprise account.
Can I combine the Azure Free and Enterprise License with one account
so that I can start using only one account and switch between subscriptions
Thank you
Due to authentication requirements and licensing we cannot do that, thats what I heard from one the MSFT team members just now.
I added for testing purposes Access to Azure Active Directory in Windows Azure. Now I realize there is no button to cancel the subscription:
As discussed here "the underlying directory for Office 365 is Azure Active Directory (AAD). This means that if you have an Office 365 account, you already have a directory -or "tenant"- in AAD."
1) Does this mean that this particular subscription has always been there - just not visible?
2) Can you cancel it?
3) According to the pricing list adding objects is free (Free up to 500,000 objects), Application Enhancements (Preview) and Access Control. At which point would I be billed? (I know Azure generally bills for usage, the question is what counts as the usage in this particular situation)
1) The Azure AD was created when you signed up for Office365. This Azure subscription however was created when you signed up for Azure. Azure subscription is required to manage the many aspects of Azure AD that aren't available in the O365 portal.
2) you can create a support ticket (type billing) to have the subscription cancelled. If it's a free trial subscription it will automatically get cancelled. If it's a pay-as-you-go - it won't cost you anything until you use paid services. Which takes us to your last question ...
3) general Azure AD usage is free. If you need paid services of Azure AD like multi-factor auth for users, application access, self-service password reset you will need to but Azure AD licenses. As a thumb rule - if you haven't turned on multi-factor auth for users and you haven't bought AAD basic or AAD premium licenses - you won't spend any money on Azure AD. The object limit is a cap.
Hope that helps
Does anybody know what is the maximum number of Windows Azure Active Directory tenants that can be created per subscription?
There is only one tenant created per subscription. A tenant is an organisation, not a user. See the What is an Azure AD Tenant? MSDN article.
If you are using the free tier, you can create a maximum of 500,000 objects in Windows Azure AD. The default is 150,000; but you can have this limit increased. There is a limit of 10 apps per user.
If you are using the premium service, there is no limit.
See more limitations at the pricing page.