Why Open-Source Office Suites Still Lose to Microsoft 365

The open-source office suite landscape in 2026

The open-source productivity space is more mature than most people realize. Tech journalist Arol Wright spent a month living inside LibreOffice, OnlyOffice, and every other well-regarded free alternative. His conclusion after 30 days? He quietly renewed his Microsoft 365 subscription.
LibreOffice is the obvious starting point. It descends from OpenOffice.org and has been around since the early 2000s. The Document Foundation actively maintains it, shipping regular updates for Windows, macOS, and Linux. The interface feels dated but familiar. For straightforward documents, it handles itself with quiet competence.
OnlyOffice takes a different approach. Its desktop editors are open-source, but the project earns most of its revenue through cloud collaboration services. The interface deliberately mimics Microsoft Office, which makes switching less jarring for Word or Excel users. In Wright's testing, OnlyOffice handled .docx, .xlsx, and .pptx files noticeably better than LibreOffice.
Beyond those two, there's Calligra Suite from the KDE project, which is polished but rarely discussed outside Linux circles. WPS Office exists too, though it's closed-source despite being free.
Where free alternatives actually work
For individual use, these tools are genuinely capable. LibreOffice Writer can handle most word processing tasks. Calc manages spreadsheets fine for personal budgets or data analysis. If your documents never leave your computer, or if you only share with other LibreOffice users, you'll rarely hit limitations.
OnlyOffice deserves credit for narrowing the gap with Microsoft's formats. Opening a complex Word document in OnlyOffice is far less likely to scramble your formatting than doing the same in LibreOffice. For teams considering a switch, OnlyOffice's interface familiarity also cuts training time.
- Basic document creation and editing works well in both suites
- PDF export is reliable across all major alternatives
- LibreOffice's database tool (Base) has no direct Microsoft equivalent in the consumer tier
- Both suites run on Windows, macOS, and Linux without issues
The formatting tax is real
“The formatting tax is a real thing. Sending documents back and forth between LibreOffice and Word is a constant gamble of whether the recipient will see a clean layout or a broken mess.”
— Arol Wright, Tech Journalist at How-To Geek
This is where open-source alternatives hit their wall. In corporate environments, you rarely control what software your clients, partners, or colleagues use. Microsoft 365 has an estimated 345 million commercial users. When you send a document to someone outside your organization, they're probably opening it in Microsoft Office.
Complex documents are the breaking point. Tables shift. Font substitutions happen. Paragraph spacing changes. Tracked changes display differently. None of these issues are catastrophic in isolation, but they compound. Every document exchange becomes a minor quality assurance task.
Collaboration remains the bigger gap
Modern office work isn't just about creating documents. It's about creating them together. Microsoft 365's real-time co-authoring, comment threads, and version history have become baseline expectations. Open-source alternatives struggle here.
OnlyOffice offers collaborative editing, but its full feature set requires paid cloud services. LibreOffice has some collaboration features through third-party integrations, but setup is more complex and the experience is less polished.
Reddit discussions in r/linux and r/sysadmin reflect this reality. The consensus is that open-source tools work well for individual use but struggle with what one commenter called "office politics." Client-facing document stability matters. Real-time collaboration matters. Many professionals keep Microsoft 365 as a secondary or primary tool specifically for these situations.
Another detailed comparison of competing tools with real-world trade-offs
The $10 question
A Microsoft 365 Personal subscription costs about $10 per month. For many professionals, that's the price of avoiding friction. No more checking if formatting survived the round trip. No more explaining to clients why your document looks different on their screen. No more workarounds for collaboration features.
That's not a dismissal of open-source alternatives. For students, hobbyists, Linux-focused workflows, or environments where everyone uses the same tools, LibreOffice and OnlyOffice are legitimately good choices. But professionals who regularly exchange documents with external parties face a different calculus.
✅ Pros
- • Free to use with no subscription fees
- • Cross-platform support including Linux
- • No vendor lock-in or data privacy concerns
- • LibreOffice includes a database tool not found in Microsoft 365 Personal
❌ Cons
- • Document formatting often breaks when exchanging with Microsoft Office users
- • Real-time collaboration features lag behind Microsoft 365
- • OnlyOffice's full collaboration requires paid services
- • Interface and features feel dated compared to current Microsoft offerings
When open-source makes sense
The choice isn't binary. Some professionals use LibreOffice for personal projects and Microsoft 365 for client work. Others use OnlyOffice as their primary tool but keep a Microsoft subscription for the occasional compatibility-critical document.
If you're considering a switch, ask yourself: How often do your documents leave your control? How often do you collaborate in real-time? How much of your day goes to fixing formatting issues? The answers will tell you whether $10 a month is worth it for your workflow.
Logicity's Take
Frequently Asked Questions
Is LibreOffice as good as Microsoft Office?
LibreOffice handles basic document creation well, but struggles with complex formatting when files are exchanged with Microsoft Office users. For standalone use, it's capable. For cross-platform collaboration, compatibility issues remain a problem.
Can OnlyOffice replace Microsoft 365?
OnlyOffice offers better Microsoft format compatibility than LibreOffice and a familiar interface. However, its full collaboration features require paid cloud services, and real-time co-authoring isn't as seamless as Microsoft 365.
Why do companies still pay for Microsoft 365?
Document compatibility and real-time collaboration. With 345 million commercial users, Microsoft 365 is the de facto standard. Exchanging documents with external partners is smoother when everyone uses the same tools.
What's the best free alternative to Microsoft Office?
OnlyOffice offers the best Microsoft format compatibility, while LibreOffice provides the most complete feature set. The right choice depends on whether you prioritize compatibility with Microsoft files or a fully open-source solution.
Is $10 a month worth it for Microsoft 365?
For professionals who regularly exchange documents with clients and partners, yes. The time saved on formatting fixes and collaboration workarounds typically exceeds the subscription cost.
Need Help Implementing This?
Source: How-To Geek
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
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