Microsoft is building what it internally calls a “super app,” a single platform designed to merge its scattered constellation of Copilot AI products into one cohesive experience. The effort brings together GitHub Copilot, Copilot chat, Copilot Cowork, and an internal tool called Autopilot under one roof.

Fewer than 4.5% of Microsoft 365’s 450 million customers actually pay for Copilot features. That’s roughly 20 million potential premium users at best, in a universe where Microsoft has nearly half a billion seats to sell into.

GitHub Copilot tells a slightly different story, with over 4.7 million paid subscribers. But that’s a developer-specific tool with a narrowly targeted audience. The broader Copilot ecosystem, the one Microsoft wants embedded in every office worker’s daily routine, has barely scratched the surface of its addressable market.

Jacob Andreou, who was promoted to lead the Copilot initiative in March 2026, is now steering the super app project under the internal tagline “Delivering one Copilot.” A reference to the super app is expected at Microsoft’s upcoming Build conference. Plans point to a potential launch by the end of summer 2026.

GitHub Copilot handles AI-assisted coding, suggesting code completions and helping developers write software faster. Copilot chat functions as a conversational AI assistant integrated across Microsoft products like Teams, Outlook, and Word. Copilot Cowork is a newer collaborative AI feature designed for team-based workflows. And Autopilot is an internal Microsoft tool that has, until now, remained largely behind the curtain.