Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Microsoft will let users disable the floating Copilot button in the Office app

Microsoft is finally letting Office users hide the floating Copilot button after user backlash.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Microsoft Windows Copilot key on a keyboard
Microsoft

If you use Word, Excel, or PowerPoint, you have probably noticed a floating Copilot button hovering over your documents. It has been there since December 2025, sitting at the bottom-right corner of your screen, and Microsoft is finally letting you move it.

Starting the last week of May 2026, an update will give users the option to send it back to the ribbon where it belongs.

Why did Microsoft add the floating Copilot button in the first place?

The short answer is numbers. Only around 3.3% of Microsoft 365 users actually pay for Copilot, and adoption has stayed well below what Microsoft expected. To push more people toward the feature, Microsoft rolled out what it calls the Copilot Dynamic Action Button, or DAB, and quietly expanded it to everyone by May 2026.

Recommended Videos

The idea was that making Copilot more visible would drive more clicks, which it did. However, it also drove a wave of complaints. Excel users were hit hardest, since the button floated directly over spreadsheet cells, blocking data with no easy way to dismiss it.

How to move the Copilot button off your screen

Once the update rolls out, you can right-click the Copilot icon and choose to move it back to the ribbon. Microsoft is not removing the dock option, so you will still be able to switch between the floating button, the docked version, and the ribbon placement depending on your preference.

Katie Kivett, partner group product manager at Microsoft, acknowledged the frustration, saying the company is making short-term adjustments while it figures out a better long-term approach.

This is not the first time Microsoft has quietly scaled back Copilot. Just a month ago, it began pulling Copilot buttons from various Windows 11 apps after similar pushback. It seems Microsoft is slowly learning that forcing AI into every corner of your workflow is not the same as making it useful.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
Apple Preview is the most underrated Mac app. Here are 7 things you didn’t know you could do with it.
Stop paying for apps that do less than what's already on your Mac.
Preview app

Most Mac users see Apple Preview as only an app to view images, PDFs, and other documents. That's it. If that sounds like you, you are leaving a lot on the table, because Preview has quietly grown into one of the most capable apps on macOS, and it’s available for free.

I use the app daily to edit images, markup and sign PDFs, redact information, and so much more. So let me walk you through seven things you probably didn't know Apple Preview could handle.

Read more
Google, Meta and Microsoft are getting worker data from sneaky bossware tools, report says
Worker surveillance is becoming a data business
A busy office

The remote work era made employee monitoring software easier to justify. What began as a way to watch people working from home is now being normalized on office floors, too. Right on cue, a new Northeastern University study suggests the data collected through these tools is also being shared with major third parties, including Google, Facebook, and Microsoft.

David Choffnes, a professor at Northeastern’s Khoury College of Computer Sciences and one of the study’s co-authors, said the research shows how little privacy protection workers have in the workplace. He also noted that the issue is not just data collection by employers, but the fact that this data is being shared outside the company.

Read more
Mini PCs are the most boring exciting computers you can buy
They are not glamorous, but they make buying a computer feel less like signing up for a lifestyle
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

I’ve been thinking about buying a new device, which is usually where reasonable plans go to die. I don’t want to spend big laptop money, partly because I know most of that laptop would sit on a desk pretending to be portable. I also don’t want to build my own desktop, because that becomes a hobby the moment you blink. Suddenly, I’m comparing cases, power supplies, cooling, GPUs, and other things I only wanted to think about for five minutes.

That’s how I ended up looking at mini PCs, possibly the least dramatic lane in personal computing. They’re small boxes that sit under a monitor and mind their business. Nobody looks at one and thinks, wow, the future finally arrived in matte black.

Read more