Microsoft is working on a new app that would bring several of its Copilot products together in one place, according to people familiar with the project. The effort reflects a broader attempt by the company to reduce confusion around its artificial intelligence offerings and make them easier for customers to use.
The planned app would combine GitHub Copilot, the Copilot chat feature, Copilot Cowork, and an internal agentic workflow capability known as Autopilot into a single destination, the sources said. Microsoft is also considering ways to include Microsoft 365 Copilot accounts in the same interface, giving users one place to access a wider set of AI tools.
The project is being led by Jacob Andreou, Microsoft’s recently appointed head of Copilot. One of his main responsibilities has been to bring together the consumer and enterprise sides of Copilot into a more unified product strategy. Internally, the initiative is being associated with the slogan “Delivering one Copilot.”
The company has not publicly announced the app, and Microsoft declined to comment. The sources said the plan is still evolving and could change before launch. Even so, the current target is to release the super app by the end of summer.
Microsoft may mention some of the app’s underlying features at its Build developer conference in San Francisco next week, though the company is not expected to show the app itself, the sources said.
A key part of the plan is to reduce the back-and-forth users face when moving among Microsoft’s different Copilot products. The company believes a single interface could make the overall experience more straightforward and help users better understand the value of its AI services.
The move comes as Microsoft works to strengthen a Copilot brand that has faced a series of setbacks. The company was an early heavyweight backer of AI through its $13 billion partnership with OpenAI, but it has since lost some of that early momentum as competitors moved quickly. Microsoft has also introduced multiple versions of Copilot over time, which has added to customer confusion.
The different Copilot offerings have been split between free consumer products and paid enterprise tools. Microsoft 365 Copilot has not yet achieved broad paid adoption, with fewer than 4.5% of the 450 million customers of the Microsoft 365 suite currently paying for Copilot features, according to the report. GitHub Copilot, meanwhile, has grown into a larger business, with more than 4.7 million paid subscribers, though it faces intensifying competition from startups and rivals in the AI coding market.
Microsoft’s consumer chatbot has also lagged behind major competitors such as OpenAI and Google in active usage, the report said. The challenge has pushed the company to rethink how it organizes its AI products and how it presents them to users.
The restructuring also fits into a wider management shake-up at Microsoft. Chief Executive Satya Nadella promoted Andreou in March and created a unified Copilot team as part of the company’s effort to catch up in AI. Microsoft has also undergone a broad internal reorganization over the past year, marked by departures, team changes and, in April, its first employee buyout offer aimed at longtime workers.
At Build, Microsoft AI Chief Executive Mustafa Suleyman is expected to introduce new proprietary AI models. Suleyman previously led consumer Copilot before the March reorganization shifted focus toward model development.
Microsoft is not alone in trying to bundle AI and related services into a single app. OpenAI, Elon Musk’s X, Uber and Meta have all explored or expanded super app-style strategies, suggesting a wider industry push toward fewer, more centralized interfaces.