Workday's FY2026 catalog takes effect February 1, 2026, and the changes are the most material in five years. Core HCM list is up 5-7%, but the headline movement is not where the impact lives. AI repackaging, Premier Support restructuring, and platform-tier recalibration drive the real economics — and they have not been telegraphed clearly to customers.
Workday's FY2026 list pricing — the catalog that takes effect February 1, 2026 — introduces the most material set of changes in five years. Across the 14 modules we track, list prices are moving 4-12%, but the headline list-price changes are not where the actual customer impact lives. The structural changes — to AI bundling, platform consumption pricing, and Premier support tier definitions — drive the real economics, and they have not been telegraphed clearly to customers.
This piece breaks down what is actually changing in FY2026, where the cliffs are, and what customers in active negotiations or approaching renewal should be doing right now to protect themselves.
Across the modules we benchmark, FY2026 list prices have moved as follows. Core HCM list per-employee-per-month is up 5-7% versus FY2025. Workday Payroll (US) is up 4-6%. Workday Recruiting is up 6-9%. Adaptive Planning enterprise edition is up 8-11%. Prism Analytics tiered pricing is up 7-12% depending on tier. Peakon is up 5-8%. Extend platform pricing is up 9-14%. Premier Support tier rates are up 6-9%.
For most enterprise customers, the realized increase will be smaller than these list movements — discount disciplines have not changed materially, and bundled customers will see effective increases in the 3-7% range. The customers most exposed to the full list-price increase are those approaching renewal with single-module contracts and minimal bundle leverage.
Workday's FY2026 catalog takes effect February 1, 2026. Contracts signed before that date lock in FY2025 list-price baselines for the term. Contracts signed after — even if negotiated in January — will quote against the new catalog. Customers in active negotiation should accelerate signature.
Workday has unbundled several AI capabilities that were previously included in base HCM and is repackaging them as a "Workday AI" add-on for FY2026 contracts. The capabilities affected include Workday Help (the AI-powered employee help agent), several recruiting-AI features, and the manager-workflow AI assistants. Customers on FY2025 or earlier contracts retain inclusion; new and renewing contracts in FY2026 face an add-on quote that typically ranges $1.20-$2.40 PEPM for the full AI bundle.
This is the single most important pricing change in FY2026, and it is the most negotiable. AI features were previously included; treating them as suddenly chargeable is a sales positioning, not a structural shift. Customers who negotiate firmly typically get the AI bundle included at no additional cost, especially when paired with renewal commitments or expansion.
FY2026 introduces revised Premier Support tier definitions, with the standard "Premier" tier losing some of the named-resource hours that previously distinguished it from Standard. Workday's positioning is that Premier is now "Premier+" for the same price, which is the most charitable reading; the practical reality is that the same fee buys somewhat fewer named-resource hours unless customers actively renegotiate. The lever is to either downgrade to Standard (and use the savings for fractional advisory) or push for a Premier tier with restored named-resource hours.
Extend, Prism Analytics, and Orchestrate consumption pricing has been recalibrated for FY2026. The thresholds for tier movement have tightened — meaning customers near the upper end of a tier are more likely to be pushed into the next tier under FY2026 metering than under FY2025. The implication is to renegotiate overage allowances and tier-step credits explicitly in any FY2026 contract, with awareness that the default thresholds are now less customer-friendly.
If your renewal sits between February 2026 and January 2027, you have a specific action list. First, request a written FY2026 pricing letter from your account team that itemizes what has changed for your specific contract — most customers will find AI repackaging and platform-tier changes that were not surfaced in initial renewal conversations. Second, negotiate AI bundle inclusion explicitly; do not accept it as an add-on line item. Third, renegotiate overage allowances on platform consumption with awareness of the new tier thresholds. Fourth, lock in price-increase caps for the term — FY2026 has created an inflation argument that Workday will lean on for years if not contractually capped.
The customers most exposed are those whose renewals are in March-May 2026, who will see FY2026 pricing applied with the structural changes embedded by default. The customers in the best position are those whose renewals are in October-January 2027 — they have time to negotiate, and Workday's fiscal-year-end discipline still applies.
Three modules have FY2026 increases meaningfully above the 5-7% baseline. Adaptive Planning enterprise (8-11%) reflects Workday's view that competitive pressure from Anaplan and Pigment has not materialized as feared, and the install base is sticky. Extend platform pricing (9-14%) reflects investment in platform capability and Workday's belief that customers with material Extend deployments are switching-cost locked. Prism Analytics tiered pricing (7-12%, with the higher number concentrated in the upper tiers) reflects compute cost inflation and Workday's pricing posture relative to Snowflake and Databricks.
For customers materially exposed to any of these three modules, the negotiation work in FY2026 is meaningfully more important than in FY2025. The increases are real; the discount disciplines have not loosened to compensate.
Two modules have FY2026 increases below the average. Workday Learning (3-5%) reflects competitive pressure from Cornerstone, Docebo, and 360Learning that has visibly affected close rates. Workday Talent Management (3-5%) reflects similar pressure from Lattice, Culture Amp, and 15Five at the enterprise tier. For customers buying these modules in FY2026, the lower list movement is real leverage — and the competitive alternative is a credible one for the first time in several years.
For any FY2026 negotiation, bring four documents. First, the written FY2026 pricing letter from your account team. Second, a baseline summary of your current contract economics — what you pay today by module, by entitlement, and by support tier. Third, the list of FY2026 structural changes (AI repackaging, Premier restructuring, platform tier recalibration) with explicit positions on each. Fourth, a credible competitive alternative summary for any module where you have material exposure to the higher-end FY2026 increases. With those four documents, the FY2026 negotiation goes much more like FY2025 than the catalog list would suggest.
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