Microsoft Copilot

Microsoft's AI assistant built on GPT-4 class models — integrated into Windows, Microsoft 365, Edge, Teams, and GitHub.

Open Copilot →

In This Guide

  1. Who Is Copilot For?
  2. Copilot in Windows
  3. Copilot for Microsoft 365
  4. Copilot in Edge & on the Web
  5. GitHub Copilot for Developers
  6. Pricing & Plans

Who Is Copilot For?

Microsoft Copilot is Microsoft's umbrella brand for AI assistance across its entire product stack. Unlike ChatGPT or Claude, which exist primarily as chat tools, Copilot is less a single product and more a family of AI experiences embedded wherever Microsoft software runs. There's Copilot in Windows, Copilot in Word, Copilot in Excel, Copilot in Outlook, Copilot in Teams, Copilot in Edge, GitHub Copilot for developers, and Copilot in Azure for cloud and security work.

The common thread is that Copilot is built on top of OpenAI's GPT-4 class models (through Microsoft's strategic partnership) combined with Microsoft's own retrieval, grounding, and security layers. In practice, the conversational quality is comparable to ChatGPT — it's the same underlying model family — but the integration story is entirely different.

Copilot is best suited for people and organisations already invested in Microsoft's ecosystem. If your work runs on Windows, Microsoft 365, Outlook, Teams, and SharePoint, Copilot slots into the tools you already use without demanding new workflows. You don't switch to a browser tab to ask the AI — you summon it inside Word, Excel, or Outlook, and it acts on the document or message in front of you.

It's also particularly compelling for enterprise IT departments. Microsoft's AI stack inherits the tenant isolation, data residency, compliance certifications, and admin controls that come with Microsoft 365. For regulated industries, Copilot is often the easiest AI rollout to justify — the data protection and audit story is already in place, no new vendor relationship is needed.

Where Copilot is less compelling is for individuals who aren't in the Microsoft ecosystem. The free web Copilot is a solid ChatGPT alternative, but there's nothing about it that beats ChatGPT or Claude on the standalone chat experience. Copilot's edge is being where you already work — and if you don't work in Microsoft tools, that edge disappears.

Copilot in Windows

Copilot is built into Windows 11 as a sidebar assistant accessible from the taskbar. On newer Copilot+ PCs, it's promoted to a dedicated key on the keyboard, replacing the old context menu key.

The Windows integration is less transformative than Microsoft's marketing suggests. The sidebar chat is convenient, but for most day-to-day AI use, it's not dramatically different from opening a browser tab to ChatGPT or Claude. Where Windows Copilot shines is for users who want AI baked into the OS without maintaining a separate account or subscription — the free tier is capable and always one click away.

Copilot for Microsoft 365

Copilot for Microsoft 365 is the paid enterprise tier ($30/user/month) that embeds AI inside Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams, and OneNote. This is the version with the strongest productivity argument — and the version Microsoft is pushing hardest to business customers.

The $30/user/month price is aggressive, especially at scale. For a 500-person company, that's $180,000 per year on top of existing Microsoft 365 licensing. Microsoft's argument is that Copilot pays for itself in saved time, and for roles that spend most of the day in Office — sales, consulting, legal, HR, marketing — the argument often holds. For roles that barely touch Office, it's harder to justify.

Copilot in Edge & on the Web

The free Copilot at copilot.microsoft.com (and in the Edge sidebar) is Microsoft's closest equivalent to ChatGPT. It's based on GPT-4 class models, supports web search, handles images, generates images via DALL-E, and is free without even requiring a Microsoft account for basic use.

Free Copilot is genuinely competitive as a free ChatGPT alternative. It's the same underlying model family, comes with web search baked in, and doesn't require a subscription. For casual AI use, it's one of the easiest free tools to recommend.

GitHub Copilot for Developers

GitHub Copilot is the developer-focused product and the most mature member of the Copilot family. It launched in 2021, predates the rest of the Copilot brand, and has been used by millions of developers daily.

GitHub Copilot is the most broadly adopted AI coding assistant. It's not always the best on any single benchmark — Claude-based coding tools often do better on harder tasks — but the combination of price, IDE integration, and maturity makes it the default for most teams. At $10/month for individuals, it's priced well below competitors for what you get.

Pricing & Plans

PlanFreeCopilot Pro ($20/mo)Copilot for M365 ($30/user/mo)GitHub Copilot (from $10/mo)
Web & Windows chatYesYes (priority)Yes
Microsoft 365 app integrationNoPersonal M365 onlyFull Business M365
Tenant grounding (SharePoint, Teams)NoNoYes
Image generation (DALL-E)Limited dailyYes (boosted)Yes
IDE code completionLimitedYes
Copilot Chat in IDELimitedYes
Enterprise admin & complianceNoNoYesYes (Enterprise tier)

Free Copilot gives you the web chat, Windows sidebar, Edge integration, and mobile apps with GPT-4 class responses, web search, and limited image generation. For casual users, it's a fully functional free AI tool that doesn't even require an account for basic chat.

Copilot Pro at $20/month is aimed at individuals who want priority access, higher image generation limits, and integration with Copilot inside personal Microsoft 365 (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, OneNote) for subscribers of Microsoft 365 Personal or Family. It's priced in line with ChatGPT Plus and Claude Pro. For individual power users in Microsoft's ecosystem, it's a reasonable upgrade from the free tier.

Copilot for Microsoft 365 at $30/user/month is the enterprise tier with full integration across business Microsoft 365, tenant-grounded chat, SharePoint and Teams search, and admin controls. It's the version with the strongest ROI story for organisations but requires an annual commitment and existing Microsoft 365 Business licensing.

GitHub Copilot is priced separately from the Microsoft 365 Copilot family. Individual plans start at $10/month (with a limited free tier available for students and open-source maintainers), Business plans are $19/user/month, and Enterprise is $39/user/month. For developers, this is a separate purchase and it's worth evaluating against dedicated alternatives like Cursor.

The pricing calculus comes down to where you already spend money. If your organisation runs on Microsoft 365 and wants AI inside those apps, Copilot for M365 is the obvious path. If you're a solo user looking for a free ChatGPT alternative, free Copilot is hard to beat. And if you're a developer, GitHub Copilot is usually compared against other coding tools rather than against the rest of the Copilot family.

Microsoft Copilot

AI assistant across Windows, Microsoft 365, Edge, and GitHub. Free plan available.

Open Copilot →