Interest in extracting mineral resources from the seafloor through deep-sea mining has accelerated in the past decade, driven by consumer demand for various metals like zinc, cobalt, and rare earth elements. While there are ongoing studies evaluating potential environmental impacts of deep-sea mining activities, these focus primarily on impacts to animal biodiversity. The microscopic spectrum of seafloor life and the services that this life provides in the deep sea are rarely considered explicitly. In April 2018, scientists met to define the microbial ecosystem services that should be considered when assessing potential impacts of deep-sea mining, and to provide recommendations for how to evaluate and safeguard these services. Here, we indicate that the potential impacts of mining on microbial ecosystem services in the deep sea vary substantially, from minimal expected impact to loss of services that cannot be remedied by protected area offsets. For example, we (1) describe potential major losses of microbial ecosystem services at active hydrothermal vent habitats impacted by mining, (2) speculate that there could be major ecosystem service degradation at inactive massive sulfide deposits without extensive mitigation efforts, (3) suggest minor impacts to carbon sequestration within manganese nodule fields coupled with potentially important impacts to primary production capacity, and (4) surmise that assessment of impacts to microbial ecosystem services at seamounts with ferromanganese crusts is too poorly understood to be definitive. We conclude by recommending that baseline assessments of microbial diversity, biomass, and, importantly, biogeochemical function need to be considered in environmental impact assessments of deep-sea mining.With increasing demand for rare and critical metals-such as cobalt, copper, manganese, tellurium, and zinc-there is increasing interest in mining these resources from the seafloor (Hein et al. 2013; Wedding et al. 2015;Thompson et al. 2018). The primary mineral resources in the deep sea that attract attention fall into four categories (Figs. 1, 2): (1) massive sulfide deposits created at active high-temperature hydrothermal vent systems along mid-ocean ridges, back-arc spreading centers, and volcanic arcs, from the mixing of mineral-rich, advecting hydrothermal fluids with bottom seawater; (2) similar deposits at inactive hydrothermal vent sites, where fluid advection has ceased but mineral deposits remain; (3) polymetallic nodules that form on the seafloor of the open ocean