LIVE NEWS
  • Huge volcanic eruption offers clues to fighting climate change
  • Iran War Live Updates: White House Denies Iranian State Media’s Outline of ‘Unofficial’ Deal
  • XBIT DEX opens whitelist for prediction leverage, launching a 35,000 USDC campaign
  • Can you enforce strong Active Directory password rules without frustrating users?
  • Giga-IPOs are a symptom of public markets’ giga-problem
  • Family mourn ‘Hamas leader’ killed in Israeli attack | Hamas
  • Lululemon settles proxy battle with founder Chip Wilson
  • USSF Gives SpaceX $2.29B for New Data Network ‘Backbone’
Prime Reports
  • Home
  • Popular Now
  • Crypto
  • Cybersecurity
  • Economy
  • Geopolitics
  • Global Markets
  • Politics
  • See More
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Climate Risks
    • Defense
    • Healthcare Innovation
    • Science
    • Technology
    • World
Prime Reports
  • Home
  • Popular Now
  • Crypto
  • Cybersecurity
  • Economy
  • Geopolitics
  • Global Markets
  • Politics
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Climate Risks
  • Defense
  • Healthcare Innovation
  • Science
  • Technology
  • World
Home»Technology»Microsoft will finally let you uninstall Copilot
Technology

Microsoft will finally let you uninstall Copilot

primereportsBy primereportsMay 26, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Microsoft will finally let you uninstall Copilot
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


TL;DR

Microsoft’s April 2026 update lets users and administrators fully uninstall the Copilot app from Windows 11. The move follows poor adoption numbers, with only 3.3 per cent of eligible users paying for Copilot, and persistent criticism that Microsoft forced AI features on users without adequate control.

Microsoft has added the ability to fully remove the Copilot app from Windows 11. The change arrived in the April 2026 update and applies to both enterprise administrators using Group Policy and regular users who can now uninstall it through Settings like any other app.

For IT administrators, the new policy is called “Remove Microsoft Copilot app.” It sits under User Configuration, Administrative Templates, Windows Components, Windows AI in the Group Policy Editor. Administrators can also apply it through the Windows Registry. The policy will uninstall Copilot only if specific conditions are met: both Microsoft 365 Copilot and the standalone Microsoft Copilot must be installed, the user must not have manually installed the Copilot app, and the app must not have been launched in the past 28 days.

For home and Pro users, the path is simpler. Go to Settings, then Apps, then Installed Apps, search for Copilot, and select Uninstall. The app can be reinstalled later from the Microsoft Store if needed.

Microsoft will finally let you uninstall Copilot

Microsoft will finally let you uninstall Copilot

The 💜 of EU tech

The latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol’ founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It’s free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!

The move is a concession. Since integrating Copilot across Windows 11 and the Microsoft 365 suite in 2023, Microsoft has positioned the tool as its centrepiece AI product. It embedded Copilot into the taskbar, Edge, Notepad, Office apps, and Outlook, all running in the background and enabled by default. Users who wanted it gone had to resort to PowerShell scripts, third-party debloating tools, or registry hacks. The new policy makes removal an official, supported option for the first time.

The timing reflects a broader problem with Copilot adoption. Only 3.3 per cent of Microsoft 365 users who have access to Copilot Chat actually pay for it. Of roughly 450 million Microsoft 365 seats, 15 million are paid Copilot subscribers. That is a conversion rate that suggests most users either do not find the tool useful enough to pay for or actively prefer to avoid it. Microsoft’s own terms of service describe Copilot as being “for entertainment purposes only,” a disclaimer that sits uncomfortably alongside a product marketed as a productivity tool priced at $30 per user per month.

The uninstall option is part of a wider Windows 11 cleanup effort. Microsoft has been removing legacy features and reducing pre-installed software in recent updates. WordPad was deprecated in 2024. The Tips app was removed. Cortana was discontinued. Letting users remove Copilot follows the same logic: if a feature is not being used, forcing it on people generates resentment rather than adoption.

Enterprise customers have been particularly vocal. IT administrators managing thousands of devices objected to Copilot being pushed to managed environments without adequate controls. Microsoft has been rethinking its AI strategy more broadly, launching its own MAI model family to reduce dependence on OpenAI and cutting internal Claude Code licences after the costs proved difficult to justify.

The 28-day inactivity condition on the Group Policy removal is worth noting. If a user has opened Copilot even once in the past four weeks, the policy will not uninstall it. Microsoft is clearly trying to preserve the app for anyone who has shown even minimal engagement while giving administrators a way to clear it from machines where it sits untouched.

The change does not affect Copilot features embedded elsewhere in Windows, such as AI suggestions in the Start menu search, AI-powered features in Paint and Photos, or Copilot integration in Edge. Removing the standalone Copilot app removes the dedicated AI chat interface but does not strip AI from the operating system entirely.

For Microsoft, the calculation is straightforward. A product that users actively resent and administrators work around is doing more harm to Windows sentiment than any AI feature is worth. Letting people remove it is cheaper than the support burden, community backlash, and enterprise friction that forcing it creates.

The broader pattern across the tech industry is similar. GitHub froze new Copilot sign-ups after agentic AI usage broke the economics of its pricing model. Google has faced pushback over AI Overviews in Search. Apple settled an AI exaggeration lawsuit for $250 million. The lesson is consistent: users will adopt AI tools that demonstrably improve their work, but they will push back hard against AI that is imposed on them without clear value.

Microsoft is learning that lesson in real time. The Copilot uninstall button is small, but the signal it sends is not. When a company that invested $13 billion in OpenAI admits that its flagship AI product should be optional, that is an acknowledgement that the current version has not yet earned its place on every desktop.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleTrump renews petition for White House ballroom, pointing to nearby shooting | Donald Trump News
Next Article Scientists discover why Ozempic and Wegovy weight loss eventually plateaus
primereports
  • Website

Related Posts

Technology

Did the Pope use AI to write about the dangers of AI?

May 27, 2026
Technology

UK Visa Portal spilled thousands of applicants’ passports and selfies online — and hasn’t fixed the leak

May 27, 2026
Technology

N100 mini PCs quietly killed the Raspberry Pi for home servers

May 27, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Global Resources Outlook 2024 | UNEP

December 6, 20258 Views

Together AI Open-Sources OSCAR: An Attention-Aware 2-Bit KV Cache Quantization System for Long-Context LLM Serving

May 26, 20266 Views

The D Brief: DHS shutdown likely; US troops leave al-Tanf; CNO’s plea to industry; Crowded robot-boat market; And a bit more.

February 14, 20265 Views
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Latest Reviews

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

PrimeReports.org
Independent global news, analysis & insights.

PrimeReports.org brings you in-depth coverage of geopolitics, markets, technology and risk – with context that helps you understand what really matters.

Editorially independent · Opinions are those of the authors and not investment advice.
Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
Key Sections
  • World
  • Geopolitics
  • Popular Now
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Cybersecurity
  • Crypto
All Categories
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Climate Risks
  • Crypto
  • Cybersecurity
  • Defense
  • Economy
  • Geopolitics
  • Global Markets
  • Healthcare Innovation
  • Politics
  • Popular Now
  • Science
  • Technology
  • World
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
  • Cookie Policy
  • DMCA / Copyright Notice
  • Editorial Policy

Sign up for Prime Reports Briefing – essential stories and analysis in your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Privacy Policy. You can opt out anytime.
Latest Stories
  • Huge volcanic eruption offers clues to fighting climate change
  • Iran War Live Updates: White House Denies Iranian State Media’s Outline of ‘Unofficial’ Deal
  • XBIT DEX opens whitelist for prediction leverage, launching a 35,000 USDC campaign
© 2026 PrimeReports.org. All rights reserved.
Privacy Terms Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.