Microsoft merges consumer and enterprise Copilot AI chatbots into one application

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Microsoft is done playing the two-Copilot game. The company announced plans to merge its consumer and enterprise AI chatbot products into a single unified application, a move designed to eliminate the awkward split personality that has defined its AI assistant strategy.

The consolidated Copilot app is expected to roll out by August 2026, combining features that were previously siloed between personal and business versions.

One app to rule them all

The merger puts Jacob Andreou in the driver’s seat as Executive Vice President overseeing the newly unified Copilot teams. Andreou was appointed to this role following a major organizational restructuring that Microsoft revealed on March 17, 2026.

Meanwhile, Mustafa Suleyman, who previously helmed much of Microsoft’s consumer AI efforts, is pivoting to focus on frontier AI model development and what the company describes as initiatives centered on superintelligence.

The unified app will incorporate AI agents and coding tools alongside the conversational features users already know. With over 100 million monthly active users as of early 2026, Copilot already has serious scale.

The competitive landscape is getting crowded

Microsoft isn’t making this move in a vacuum. OpenAI’s ChatGPT continues to dominate consumer mindshare. Anthropic’s Claude has carved out a devoted following, particularly among developers and power users. Google’s Gemini integration strategy is weaving AI into every corner of its product ecosystem.

The inclusion of coding tools is particularly telling. GitHub Copilot has already proven that developers will pay for AI-assisted coding. Baking those capabilities into a broader Copilot app could create a single interface where a user drafts a marketing email in the morning and debugs Python in the afternoon.

The August 2026 rollout timeline gives investors a clear date to watch. Enterprise adoption metrics in the first quarter after launch will tell us whether consolidation was the right call.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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