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

Microsoft pushed Copilot everywhere, but barely anyone bought it, and even fewer use it: Report

Users are barely showing up for Copilot

Add as a preferred source on Google
Microsoft Copilot Banner Featured
Microsoft

Microsoft has spent the past few years making Copilot extraordinarily difficult to avoid. It appeared in Windows 11, and soon found its way to Edge, Word, and almost everywhere else in Microsoft’s software suite. New laptops even received a dedicated Copilot key. Microsoft wanted AI to become a daily habit, and it had hundreds of millions of existing customers to leverage.

But the latest adoption figures suggest that the distribution was quite disappointing. Microsoft revealed that Copilot 365 has more than 20 million paid seats. While that does sound impressive at a glance, this number is dwarfed when you compare the company’s more than 450 million paid commercial Microsoft 365 seats. So fewer than 4.5% of those customers pay for the full Copilot experience.

Most paid seats still gather digital dust

More interestingly, paying for Copilot does not necessarily mean employees are regularly using it. According to a new report, enterprise surveys place weekly usage among licensed Copilot seats at only 20% to 30%. Applied to Microsoft’s disclosed numbers, that leaves somewhere around 4 million to 6 million weekly users, or roughly 1% of Microsoft 365’s broader commercial customer base. This is basically just the tiniest piece of the whole pie.

Recommended Videos

Keep in mind that these figures are for the paid Microsoft 365 Copilot product, which can work across company emails, meetings, and other related systems. Meaning, they do not account for everyone using the free consumer chatbot or Copilot Chat. This is something eligible Microsoft 365 customers receive without purchasing the full license.

It shows that companies may buy thousands of seats during an AI rollout, yet only a minority of employees appear to make Copilot part of their weekly routine. Microsoft isn’t unaware of this gap and has acknowledged this. Office users are gaining the option to hide their floating Copilot button, while qualifying organizations will be able to uninstall the Windows app. The company has also scaled back Copilot branding in some inbox apps following the wider Microslop backlash.

Microsoft 365 prices went up anyway

Alongside the lukewarm adoption, the company also treated users to higher Microsoft 365 prices. At the start of this month, Microsoft increased the US monthly price of Business Basic from $6 to $7 and Business Standard from $12.50 to $14. Several enterprise and frontline plans also rose by between 5% and 33%.

The company also turned its Microsoft 365 Business Standard and Premium packages with paid Copilot into subscriptions priced at $23.50 and $32 per user each month.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
Meta’s detection tool fails to identify photos generated by its own Muse Image AI
Meta has created an invisible watermarking tool called Content Seal that is embedded in all images generated by the Muse Image AI.
Meta AI identification tool.

Earlier this week, Meta announced two new AI products, namely, Muse Image and Muse Video. As the name suggests, these are generative AI tools for making photos and video clips using natural language text prompts. Soon after their rollout commenced, these tools sparked controversy because Meta had automatically opted in Instagram users, allowing others to use their publicly posted media and convert them into remixed AI content. But it appears that Meta courted another loss on its side of the court.

What's the problem?

Read more
Your Google AI Studio apps can finally have polished, presentable web links
AI Studio web apps can now use personalized subdomains
google ai studio logos

Google AI Studio has made building a web app surprisingly easy. You can describe what you want, refine the design through prompts, and publish the result without setting up a traditional development environment. An awkward point of friction comes after deployment, when the finished app still has to live behind a long, forgettable Cloud Run link.

Google is now cleaning up that final step. AI Studio lets you assign a deployed web app a personalized address under the “ai.studio” domain, such as “your-app-name.ai.studio.” A recognizable URL should make the project look more presentable in a portfolio, client demo, social post, or internal project page.

Read more
You can now check if a Google ad was made using AI
Google will auto-label its own AI ads, but third-party AI ads still rely on advertisers to come clean.
google-ads-ai-label

Ever looked at an ad and wondered if a real person made it or if it was AI generated in seconds? Google is now giving you a way to find out.

The company just announced a new AI transparency label that tells you whether an ad was created or edited using generative AI tools. The label lives inside Google's My Ad Center, and it is rolling out across Google Search, YouTube, and Discover globally.

Read more