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

Microsoft will no longer auto-install M365 Copilot app on Windows PCs

Windows PC won't be getting Copilot by default, at least for now

Add as a preferred source on Google
uninstall-microsoft-copilot
Microsoft

Microsoft has stopped automatically installing the Microsoft 365 Copilot app on Windows PCs with M365 apps, after initially planning to roll it out to users by default.

The app was supposed to act as a central hub for Copilot, consolidating AI features across tools like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint into a single location.

Recommended Videos

However, instead of letting users choose, Microsoft had planned to push it directly onto devices, something many users have opposed in the past.

What changed with Microsoft’s Copilot rollout

Microsoft has now temporarily disabled the automatic installation of the Microsoft 365 Copilot app on eligible devices. This update was confirmed through the company’s Microsoft 365 message center, though no clear reason was shared for the sudden pause.

Earlier, the rollout had already started in December and was expected to expand to more users outside the European Economic Area. Even then, IT admins had the option to opt out, while users in the EEA were excluded by default.

If the rollout resumes in the future, the app will show up in your Start Menu and be enabled automatically. For now, that plan is on hold.

What if the app is already on your PC

If you already have the Microsoft 365 Copilot app installed, nothing changes. Microsoft is not removing it from your system, but you can uninstall it yourself if you want.

Admins can still deploy the app manually using other methods, and Microsoft is expected to share more updates before restarting the rollout.

Microsoft has not explained why it paused the rollout, but the move comes as the company faces growing pressure to be more careful about how it introduces AI features into Windows.

This pause also comes after a few awkward Copilot moments for Microsoft. In one instance, a Windows 11 bug ended up uninstalling the app on its own, which some users actually welcomed.

In another case, Copilot even showed up on LG TVs with no clear way to remove it, highlighting how aggressively Microsoft has pushed the feature.

For now, this is a rare step back because Microsoft is giving you more control over whether Copilot stays on your PC or not.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
Digital Trends Computex 2026 Publisher Awards
Computex 2026 had some wild tech, and these were the best.
Digital Trends Computex 2026 Publisher Awards Featured Image

Computex is always chaotic, and Computex 2026 kept the same pace. This year’s show had the usual parade of powerful laptops, overbuilt gaming rigs, and the fun, if not strange, prototypes. AI was everywhere, handheld gaming got a serious power boost, and even monitor makers came ready with displays that sound like they were pulled from a wishlist.

That’s why we’ve put together our Computex 2026 Publisher Awards, spotlighting the products that pushed the show forward.

Read more
Google Search can now monitor the web for updates on things you care about
AI Mode on Google search now lets users create search agents
Google Search information agents featured

Google has started rolling out AI Search agents that can monitor the web for users and send updates when relevant information changes. The feature was first announced at Google I/O 2026 as part of Google’s wider AI Mode overhaul, which also included a redesigned search box, Gemini 3.5 Flash, personal intelligence features, and new agentic tools for creating mini apps and dashboards.

The new feature is called information agents. It is designed for searches that do not end with a single answer. Instead of checking the same query again and again, users can ask Google to keep tracking a topic in the background.

Read more
Apple made Liquid Glass adjustable, which says plenty about Liquid Glass
The new slider is useful, welcome, and mildly hilarious after a year of Apple acting like transparent everything was the obvious future.
Text, Document, Business Card

Apple’s big glassy software future now comes with a way to make it less glassy. In iOS 27, users can adjust the translucency of the Liquid Glass effect, while macOS Golden Gate adds its own Liquid Glass controls under System Settings.

Liquid Glass is still alive across Apple’s platforms, still shimmering through menus and panels, still doing the elegant UI trick Apple clearly likes. The big visual bet has already earned a dimmer switch. After a year of treating translucency like the obvious next step, WWDC’s most revealing design update may be the one that lets people dial it back.

Read more