Introducing a new design for Microsoft 365 Copilot



 Microsoft 365 Blog:

Work rarely happens in neat lines. It moves across apps, tasks, teams, and the shifting realities of the day. We’ve redesigned the Copilot app and how Copilot shows up across Microsoft 365 apps to better move with it: cleaner, faster, and in the flow of your work.

From the start, our goal wasn’t to simply layer AI onto familiar tools, but to use it in ways that help you move more directly from intention to outcome. Shaped by your feedback, the new designs shift Copilot toward a more connected, adaptive system by turning a once static text box—the prompt line—into a task-aware workspace.

Now, within the Copilot app, the prompt line gives you more space to express your needs, while below it, Copilot surfaces tools and controls to assist with the task at hand. We’ve also created a single, flexible entry point for Copilot across Microsoft 365 apps that suggests relevant actions to help you in your work.


Introducing a new design for Copilot.

AI experiences are defined by the quality of what they make possible, and Microsoft is evolving its design approach to support this. In the AI era, the most important user experience for human-centered design to shape isn’t the interface—it’s the output. The tone, structure, readability, usefulness, and trustworthiness of Copilot’s responses impact whether your work moves from a rough idea to real progress, whether the task is small and immediate or complex and strategic.

For the next wave of Copilot design, we stepped back, simplified, and reworked key parts of the experience to meet your needs with more craft, intention, and speed.

Try the updated Copilot app experience

The Copilot app: Design and performance that move together

In studying how Copilot is used in real working rhythms, it became clear where the experience could be faster, clearer, and more helpful over time. Our new designs introduce a more intentional interface and a faster, more responsive experience. A beautiful UI that doesn’t keep pace with the person using it breaks the moment. An answer that arrives quickly but lacks coherence, shifts the burden from waiting to reworking. Speed, structure, and output quality must be holistically designed for truly performant experiences.

To craft intelligence that feels present but not imposing, we applied the long-standing design principle of progressive disclosure: starting with a clean, focused interface, then revealing more capabilities as you need them. At the interface level, a left navigation pane that expands and contracts reveals a clearer space for agents, conversations, and history. At the same time, a shared pinning system and more room for session recall make returning to work in progress easier.

The prompt surface can expand to fill the experience, making room for deeper work: pasting content, retaining structure, and using inline formatting before sending. Rather than presenting every path at once, this design organizes what matters first and reveals more capability in context, making the experience easier to navigate, understand, and trust over time.


Your prompt shapes the canvas.

Progressive disclosure also shapes output. Copilot begins with a clear, readable response, then adds structure and next-step support as you refine what you need: formatting when it improves clarity, suggested prompts when they deepen the work, follow-up actions when they move it forward.

That progression is powered by Work IQ, an intelligence layer you can see when active and directly control. Drawing on your emails, files, chats, and meetings, it adapts to the depth your work requires: quick responses when they fit the task, and deeper reasoning—including the ability to choose between AI models—when that can surface more relevant results. By grounding in your broader context, not just individual artifacts, Work IQ helps Copilot better support significant shifts, like performance review cycles or an org change.


Turn your work signals into momentum.

The result is output that unfolds in layers, with more guided, detailed, and actionable support as complexity grows. That sequence matters because work rarely begins with perfect clarity. It starts as half-formed questions, rough sentences, and problems still undefined. Thoughtfully designed experiences help bridge that gap, turning looser thinking into clearer direction, and clearer direction into outputs that fuel real progress.

None of this holds, however, if the experience doesn’t keep up—the Copilot app is now faster, more responsive, and more reliable. It loads more than twice as fast, with load times reduced by over 50%, and response times for complex chat prompts have improved by 10%. We’ve also improved the quality of responses. With more structured outputs that are easier to scan and better aligned to your intent, it moves you faster from idea to outcome. The result is an experience people rely on more consistently. In early customer feedback, users describe the updated Copilot app as cleaner and more intuitive, with design choices helping them better focus on their work.

Copilot across Microsoft 365 apps: A cohesive, agentic experience

This momentum is also evident in using Copilot across other apps. Since rolling out the new in-app experiences, Copilot usage has increased by 27% in Word, 33% in Excel, 43% in PowerPoint, and 30% in Outlook.


An experience that adapts to meet your needs.

The new experience shifts how, when, and where Copilot shows up across Microsoft 365 apps to better support how you naturally work and think. Software has long taught people to move between modes—think here, create there, refine somewhere else—but thinking and making are often entwined. You find the story while building the deck, interpret the signal while organizing the data. Copilot should honor that reality, and powerful new agentic modes are creating new paradigms.

Through capability-focused agents like Designer, Researcher, Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, interactions now fit the task at hand, rather than forcing a generic one. They evolve Copilot in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint from a tool that responds to prompts within a single document, into an experience that can take action, draw on broader work context, and more independently operate inside the apps where you already spend your time. That shift demanded a new design foundation, and everything from the entry point to the interaction model has evolved to support it.


One touchpoint across your apps.

We introduced a new experience for Copilot in the apps—a consistent entry point across apps that sits above your work and understands the context beneath it. Rather than scattering touchpoints across the interface, it anchors Copilot as one connected system across Microsoft 365, surfacing relevant actions that help you stay in flow.

From the new entry point, Copilot opens a side pane that works directly with your document: not just as chat, but as an editing partner that can suggest changes or make them, with clear signals so you always know what it’s doing. Copilot can also be invoked on the canvas itself, within a paragraph, cell, or slide, so the interaction begins where the work already lives. That movement between canvas and chat reflects how real work unfolds: not in separate modes, but in a continuous loop where ideas take shape as you build.

The bigger shift


Move forward without leaving your flow.

These updates are more than a refreshed interface. They’re a broader shift in how we design AI for work. We’re moving from individual features to connected experiences. From adding capabilities to shaping outcomes. From asking people to adapt to technology, to shaping technology around how people actually work.

As AI accelerates what can be built, the question becomes what should be built. Design exists to answer that question. We are building experiences that are faster, yes, but also clearer, more useful, and more human. In that, craft isn’t a decorative finishing touch; it’s how intelligence communicates care.



Experience the redesigned Copilot app



 Source:

 
I like copilot - it's improving by leaps and bounds almost weekly. particularly in the "What If" type of things or where you need to create things with loads of different materials - the cost and choices can be done in minutes / hours.

Before copilot this stuff could have taken days or even weeks plus loads of computer simulations , plus also results weren't always guaranteed to be optimal or the best "bang for buck".

A.I is not perfect but it's improving - too many nay-sayers and complainers around.

Anyway one here who likes and appreciates it.

Cheers
jimbo
 

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I really wish all these agents would go away until and unless we ask for them.

Personally I have no need for AI components and if I did, I would install one. I don't need or want anything in my OS unless I ask for it.

I sure as hell don't need or want an AI agent looking over my shoulder and sending anything it wants to some corporate entity.

That's one of the several reasons that I have a serious issue with the sudden rise of AI. There are far too many places now that it's able to, without any permission, to go through things that it honestly has no place to.

...and have you seen the absolute slop that AI comes up with... Video and pics that frankly have little to no value at best and are frankly scary at worst.

Linus Torvalds has already been complaining about AI code slop in the Linux kernel and now we have an AI agent running in the background sending who knows what to MS without our permission.

No thank you.....
 

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Personally I have no need for AI components and if I did, I would install one. I don't need or want anything in my OS unless I ask for it.

I sure as hell don't need or want an AI agent looking over my shoulder and sending anything it wants to some corporate entity.
I have to admit, using O&O ShutUp, I've disabled Copilot. I have no need for it and if I did, I know how to re-enable it, but for now, it stays off.
 

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CP is my favourite Artifical Idiot but I keep it confined within a web browser
 

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