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Microsoft 365 HIPAA Compliance Requirements

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Quick Answer: Microsoft 365 can support HIPAA compliance, but the platform alone does not make you compliant. You need to configure specific security controls, sign a Business Associate Agreement with Microsoft, and implement policies that satisfy the HIPAA Security, Privacy, and Breach Notification Rules across your entire environment.

Microsoft 365 HIPAA compliance requirements span technical configuration, administrative policy, and ongoing operational controls. The HIPAA Security Rule alone contains 75 implementation specifications across 18 standards, and Microsoft 365 covers only part of that surface area.

Meeting the full set of Microsoft 365 HIPAA compliance requirements means configuring the platform correctly, documenting your controls, managing Business Associate Agreements, and maintaining evidence of ongoing compliance. This page breaks down what those requirements look like in practice, what makes them difficult to meet, and what your options are for getting there.

Key Takeaways

  • Microsoft 365 provides HIPAA-eligible features, but you must configure them correctly and sign a BAA with Microsoft before the platform qualifies as part of your compliant environment.
  • The biggest challenge most organizations face is that PHI spreads across email, Teams, SharePoint, and OneDrive simultaneously, making scoping and control implementation far more complex than expected.
  • Achieving HIPAA compliance with Microsoft 365 typically takes six to twelve months for organizations starting from scratch, depending on your current security posture and how much PHI your environment touches.
  • Building an in-house compliance program costs $84,000 to $132,000 or more per year for a single qualified hire, before factoring in tooling, auditor fees, and ongoing maintenance.
  • Managed compliance services give you a dedicated team, a configured Microsoft 365 security stack, and ongoing monitoring starting at around $4,800 per month.

What Are Microsoft 365 HIPAA Compliance Requirements?

HIPAA does not certify software platforms. Microsoft 365 is a HIPAA-eligible platform, meaning Microsoft will sign a Business Associate Agreement and the platform includes features that support compliance. But eligibility is not the same as compliance. Your organization is responsible for configuring those features and meeting the underlying regulatory requirements.

HIPAA is organized around four main rules:

HIPAA Rule

What It Covers

Privacy Rule

Permitted uses and disclosures of PHI, patient rights, minimum necessary standard

Security Rule

Administrative, physical, and technical safeguards for electronic PHI (ePHI)

Breach Notification Rule

Notification requirements when unsecured PHI is exposed

Omnibus Rule

Extended obligations to business associates and subcontractors

The Security Rule is where Microsoft 365 configuration does the most work. It requires safeguards across three categories:

  • Administrative safeguards: Security management process, assigned security responsibility, workforce training, contingency planning, and periodic evaluation
  • Physical safeguards: Facility access controls, workstation use policies, and device and media controls
  • Technical safeguards: Access controls, audit controls, integrity controls, and transmission security

Within those categories, HHS identifies 75 implementation specifications across 18 standards. Some are required. Others are addressable, meaning you must implement them or document why an equivalent alternative is in place.

For Microsoft 365 specifically, the controls that map most directly to these requirements include Entra ID for access management and MFA, Microsoft Purview for data classification and DLP, Microsoft Intune for device management, Microsoft Defender for threat protection, and Microsoft Sentinel for audit logging and monitoring. Configuring each of these tools correctly, and documenting that configuration as evidence, is a core part of meeting Microsoft 365 HIPAA compliance requirements.

You can read more about how HIPAA applies to cloud environments in BEMO's HIPAA compliance guide for cloud service providers.

Challenges Companies Face When Getting HIPAA Compliant

Most organizations underestimate how much work HIPAA compliance actually requires, especially when Microsoft 365 is involved. The platform gives you the tools. Using them correctly is a different problem.

  • PHI is everywhere in Microsoft 365. Email, Teams chats, SharePoint document libraries, OneDrive folders, and even meeting recordings can contain ePHI. Scoping your environment correctly before you configure controls is harder than it sounds.
  • No internal expertise. HIPAA compliance spans IT configuration, legal review, HR policy, and security operations. Most small and mid-sized organizations do not have staff who cover all four areas.
  • BAA management is easy to overlook. You need a signed BAA with Microsoft, but also with every other vendor that touches PHI in your environment. Tracking and renewing those agreements is an ongoing operational burden.
  • Ongoing monitoring is required. HIPAA is not a one-time project. You need to review access logs, respond to security incidents, conduct periodic risk analyses, and retrain staff on a recurring basis.
  • Tool configuration gaps create real risk. Microsoft 365 ships with default settings that are not HIPAA-ready. Defender, Purview, and Intune all require deliberate configuration, and misconfiguration is one of the most common sources of breach exposure.
  • Breach notification timelines are strict. If a breach occurs, you have 60 days to notify affected individuals and HHS. If more than 500 individuals in a state are affected, you must notify prominent media outlets in that state. Meeting those timelines without a documented incident response process is extremely difficult.

What Does It Take to Meet Microsoft 365 HIPAA Compliance Requirements?

Getting from a default Microsoft 365 environment to a HIPAA-compliant one requires work across several distinct areas. Each one involves both technical implementation and documentation, and they need to happen in a coordinated sequence.

PHI and ePHI Safeguards

Your first priority is configuring Microsoft 365 to protect ePHI wherever it lives. That means enabling encryption at rest and in transit, configuring Microsoft Purview sensitivity labels and DLP policies to flag or block PHI sharing, and setting up Intune to enforce device compliance before granting access to corporate data. You also need to configure Entra ID Conditional Access policies so that only authorized users on compliant devices can reach PHI-containing systems.

Business Associate Agreement Management

Before you use Microsoft 365 to store or transmit PHI, you need a signed BAA with Microsoft. Microsoft makes this available through the Microsoft Products and Services Data Protection Addendum, but you need to formally accept it. Beyond Microsoft, you need to inventory every third-party tool integrated with your Microsoft 365 environment and confirm whether each vendor will sign a BAA. Tools like backup solutions, email security platforms, and HRIS systems can all touch PHI without your team realizing it.

Audit Logging and Monitoring

The HIPAA Security Rule requires that you maintain audit controls, meaning records of who accessed what PHI and when. Microsoft Sentinel can collect and analyze logs from across your Microsoft 365 environment, but it needs to be configured to capture the right events and retain them for the required period. You also need a process for reviewing those logs regularly and responding when something looks wrong.

Documentation and Policy Development

HIPAA requires a documented risk analysis, a risk management plan, and written policies covering workforce training, access management, incident response, and more. These are not optional. Auditors and HHS investigators will ask for them. Building this documentation library from scratch typically takes months and requires input from legal, IT, and HR.

Staff Training and Awareness

Every workforce member who handles PHI must receive HIPAA training. That includes understanding what PHI is, how to handle it in Microsoft 365 specifically, and what to do if they suspect a breach. Training needs to be documented, and it needs to be repeated when policies change or when new risks emerge.

In-House vs Managed: Approaches to HIPAA Compliance

There is no single right way to approach HIPAA compliance with Microsoft 365. The right path depends on your internal resources, your timeline, and how much of the operational burden you can realistically absorb.

 

DIY / In-House

GRC Platform Only (Drata, Vanta)

Managed Compliance Partner

Implementation

Your team builds it

Platform guides you, you do the work

Partner builds it for you

Ongoing maintenance

Your team

Your team + automation

Partner's team + automation

Auditor coordination

You manage it

Limited support

Managed end-to-end

Tech stack

You select and configure

Integrations only

Full security stack deployed

Dedicated team

Your hires ($84K-$132K+ per person)

None

Multi-role team assigned to your account

Typical timeline

12-18+ months

6-12 months

~8 months initial implementation

Starting cost

$84K-$132K+/year (one hire)

$10K-$30K/year (platform only)

~$4,800/month (full service)

The DIY path gives you full control but requires significant internal investment. A GRC platform automates evidence collection and policy tracking, but you still need someone on your team who knows how to configure Microsoft 365 correctly and interpret what the platform is flagging. A managed compliance partner takes the implementation and ongoing operations off your plate entirely.

Getting Started With HIPAA Compliance

If you are ready to move forward, the process follows a clear sequence regardless of which path you choose.

  1. Book a GAP Assessment. Start by evaluating your current Microsoft 365 environment against HIPAA Security Rule requirements. A GAP assessment identifies where your controls are missing, where your configuration falls short, and what your highest-priority remediation items are.
  1. Get Your Implementation Roadmap. Use the GAP findings to build a prioritized plan that covers technical controls, policy development, BAA management, training, and timelines. This roadmap keeps the project moving and gives you a clear picture of what done looks like.
  1. Deploy Controls. Configure your Microsoft 365 security stack, including Entra ID, Purview, Intune, Defender, and Sentinel. Stand up GRC automation to track evidence. Build and finalize your policy documentation library.
  1. Achieve and Maintain Compliance. Once controls are in place, shift to ongoing operations. That means regular risk reviews, log monitoring, workforce training cycles, BAA renewals, and staying current with HHS guidance as it evolves.

Why Choose BEMO for HIPAA Compliance

The challenges covered above are real, and they compound quickly when your environment is built on Microsoft 365. BEMO specializes in exactly this combination: HIPAA compliance delivered through a Microsoft-native security stack, with a dedicated team managing the work from GAP assessment through ongoing maintenance.

Here is what that looks like in practice:

  • Dedicated team assigned to your account: You get a Customer Success Manager, Project Manager, Delivery Engineer, Security Engineer, SOC Analyst, IT Manager, Support Engineer, and virtual CISO working on your compliance program together.
  • Microsoft-native security stack: BEMO configures and manages M365, Entra ID, Purview, Sentinel, Intune, and Defender as your HIPAA-compliant environment.
  • GRC automation with hands-on management: BEMO uses Drata for compliance automation, with dedicated compliance engineers who run the platform on your behalf rather than handing it off to you.
  • Full auditor coordination: BEMO works directly with auditors including Sensiba, A-LIGN, and Johanson Group, managing evidence collection and remediation cycles so you do not have to.
  • 24/7 SOC monitoring: AI reviews 100,000 or more monthly logs, with approximately 100 per month human-verified by BEMO's SOC team.
  • Cost advantage: Starting at approximately $4,800 per month, BEMO costs less than a single in-house compliance hire at $84,000 to $132,000 or more per year, before factoring in tooling and benefits.
  • Proven track record: BEMO is SOC 2 Type 2 and ISO 27001 certified, a 2023 Microsoft US Partner of the Year winner, and has appeared on the Inc. 5000 list four consecutive years.

Ready to Meet Your Microsoft 365 HIPAA Compliance Requirements?

BEMO owns the outcome of your compliance program, from initial configuration through ongoing maintenance, so you can focus on running your business.

Book a meeting with BEMO to get started with a GAP assessment.

Frequently Asked Questions About Microsoft 365 HIPAA Compliance Requirements

Does Microsoft 365 automatically make you HIPAA compliant?

No. Microsoft 365 is a HIPAA-eligible platform, meaning Microsoft will sign a Business Associate Agreement and the platform includes features that support compliance. But you are responsible for configuring those features correctly, building your policy documentation, and meeting all administrative and physical safeguard requirements. The platform is a tool, not a compliance program.

What Microsoft 365 features are most important for HIPAA compliance?

The most relevant Microsoft 365 features for meeting Microsoft 365 HIPAA compliance requirements are Entra ID for identity and access management, Microsoft Purview for data classification and DLP, Microsoft Intune for device compliance enforcement, Microsoft Defender for threat protection, and Microsoft Sentinel for audit logging and security monitoring. Each of these requires deliberate configuration against HIPAA Security Rule standards.

How long does it take to become HIPAA compliant using Microsoft 365?

For most organizations starting from a default Microsoft 365 configuration, achieving HIPAA compliance takes six to twelve months. With a managed compliance partner like BEMO, the typical initial implementation timeline is around eight months. The exact timeline depends on your current security posture, the volume of PHI in your environment, and how quickly your team can complete policy reviews and training.

What does a HIPAA GAP assessment include?

A HIPAA GAP assessment evaluates your current environment against the administrative, physical, and technical safeguard requirements in the HIPAA Security Rule. For Microsoft 365 environments, that includes reviewing your Entra ID configuration, Purview policies, device management settings, audit logging, and existing documentation. The output is a prioritized list of gaps and a remediation roadmap. You can learn more about how BEMO approaches this through their HIPAA compliance services.

Why should you use a managed compliance partner for HIPAA?

HIPAA compliance requires ongoing work across IT, security, legal, and HR. Most small and mid-sized organizations do not have staff who cover all four areas at the depth HIPAA requires. A managed compliance partner gives you a full team without the cost and time of building one in-house. BEMO's model assigns eight dedicated roles to each client account and owns the outcome of the compliance program, including auditor coordination and ongoing monitoring.

What team does BEMO assign for HIPAA compliance?

BEMO assigns a Customer Success Manager, Project Manager, Delivery Engineer, Security Engineer, SOC Analyst, IT Manager, Support Engineer, and virtual CISO to each client account. This team structure means you have dedicated coverage across implementation, security operations, and strategic compliance guidance throughout your engagement.

Can you manage HIPAA compliance alongside other frameworks in Microsoft 365?

Yes. Many organizations using Microsoft 365 need to meet multiple frameworks simultaneously, such as HIPAA and SOC 2, or HIPAA and ISO 27001. BEMO's managed compliance program is designed to handle multiple frameworks at once, using a shared control approach that reduces duplication of effort. You can read more about managing overlapping requirements in BEMO's guide on managing multiple compliance frameworks. 

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