Standalone Excel — _top_

It’s now a for control, privacy, and offline certainty. If that’s your world, keep your local copy close. If you’re collaborating daily? The cloud won, and that’s mostly okay.

For millions of people, Excel still lives entirely on a local hard drive. No internet required. No Teams integration. No automatic saves to SharePoint. Just a .xlsx file, saved to a folder you control (or don’t). standalone excel

Just don’t let Microsoft trick you into thinking standalone doesn’t exist anymore. It’s now a for control, privacy, and offline certainty

That’s —and it’s both a superpower and a quiet relic. The cloud won, and that’s mostly okay

It does. And for some of us, it still works better. Want me to adjust the tone (more technical / more beginner-friendly) or add a section comparing Excel LTSC vs Microsoft 365 pricing?

Here’s a blog post draft exploring the concept of a —what it means, why it matters, and where it fits today. Is “Standalone Excel” Still a Thing? A Look at the Lone Spreadsheet Open Excel. No cloud. No co-authoring. No OneDrive pop-ups. Just you, a grid, and a blinking cursor.

They open a local file… then copy data from a web portal. They run a macro… that queries a cloud database via ODBC. They email a file… to someone who opens it in Teams.