Edit with Copilot in Word: From Chat Pane to Real Co‑Author

Microsoft is giving Copilot in Word an entirely new role: Edit with Copilot (formerly Agent Mode) turns the Copilot panel into a persistent co‑author that makes changes directly in the open document: rewriting, restructuring, reformatting, across multiple conversational turns. No more copy‑pasting from a side panel: the output lands exactly where it belongs. Here’s what the feature can do, how to get early access, and what the first wave of testers found.
Value: Faster document editing
Use case: Editing, restructuring, reformatting
Read time:
5 min.
Difficulty: Easy

Feature Rating

Ease of Use
Edits land directly in the document; multi‑turn dialogue makes interaction intuitive. 100%
Time-saving
Rewriting and restructuring without copy‑paste detours. 85%
Added value
Work IQ access to emails, meetings, and files right from the prompt. 100%
Potential
Biggest Copilot‑in‑Word leap yet; additional modes (Designer, Analyst) on the way. 90%

Edit with Copilot has been rolling out worldwide since early 2026 but is not yet available in every tenant. Premium Copilot license holders should check their Frontier or Insider status if the feature is not visible. This article is based on Microsoft’s official documentation, the February 2026 M365 Champions Community call, our own hands‑on experience, and reports from other early testers.

  • Product name: Edit with Copilot in Word.
  • Status: Worldwide rollout since early 2026 (General Availability). Early access via Microsoft Frontier or Microsoft 365 Insider (Beta Channel).
  • Positioning: Edit with Copilot turns Copilot into a persistent co‑author that makes changes directly in the document—across multiple conversational turns. Microsoft describes the shift as moving from “AI‑assisted” to “AI‑executed.”
  • Two Copilot tools for Word: Microsoft now draws a clear line between two tools. Edit with Copilot lives inside the Word app and lets you refine and restructure an open document through the Copilot chat pane. The Word Agent, by contrast, lives in M365 Copilot Chat—outside the Word app—and creates brand‑new Word documents from scratch.
  • Work IQ: With a Microsoft 365 Copilot (Premium) license, Edit with Copilot draws on Work IQ—the intelligence layer that connects emails, meetings, files, and calendar. This means prompts can pull in live context from across your Microsoft 365 environment.
  • Availability: Word for Windows (desktop), Word for the Web, and Word for Mac.
  • In‑document editing: Copilot makes changes directly inside the open document, using Word’s native styles and formatting. No copy‑pasting from a side panel.
  • Multi‑turn conversation: Unlike a one‑shot prompt, Edit with Copilot maintains context across turns. You can ask it to rewrite a paragraph, then shorten the result, then adjust the tone—all as a continuous dialogue.
  • Reference other files: Type / in the prompt box to reference a specific document, email, or meeting. Copilot can then pull content or data from that source directly into the current document (requires a Microsoft 365 Copilot license).
  • Works with Track Changes: If Track Changes is enabled, Copilot’s edits are tracked in the document. You can review, accept, or reject them like any other change.
  • Fully reversible: Every Copilot edit can be undone via the standard Undo function or by reverting to a prior version through Word’s version history.
  • Blank page? No problem: Since February 2026, prompting Copilot on a blank document automatically activates Edit with Copilot—a seamless AI‑assisted start from the very first word.
  • No image generation: Edit with Copilot cannot generate or insert images. To use Copilot for image creation, turn off the Edit mode and use the standard Chat experience instead.
  • No comment editing: Copilot cannot add or modify Word comments. If it edits a paragraph with an anchored comment, the comment may be deleted.
  • Current document only: Edit with Copilot can only create content within the currently open document. Creating new files is not supported.
  • No external tools: Integration with external tools or third‑party services is not supported at this time.
  • M365 Champions Community Call (February 2026): Chelsea Fesik from the Office AI product team demonstrated the Word Agent for long‑form document creation—guides, reports, proposals. Her demo showed how the agent first asks clarifying questions (audience, tone, theme) before generating a structured draft. Attendees were then able to add sections, adjust the tone, or expand on specific areas in conversation—without restarting the process.
  • Chris Menard, Microsoft Trainer (March 2026): Menard tested both tools and stressed that the most important thing for new users is knowing when to use which one. In his Word Agent test, he entered a simple prompt (“Create an SOP for new hires”)—the agent asked two clarifying questions and then generated a 10‑section document with tables, charts, and checklists. A notable detail: Copilot let him know mid‑task that he could go do something else while it finished.
  • General user feedback: Aggregated reviews of Microsoft 365 Copilot from 2026 consistently highlight two strengths: seamless integration without app‑switching, and strong performance on summarization, restructuring, and document refinement tasks.
  1. Check your license: You need either a Microsoft 365 Copilot license (enterprise) or a Microsoft 365 Premium subscription (individual).
  2. Look for the feature in Word: Open Word and click Copilot in the Home tab or sidebar. If Edit with Copilot is available to your account, it will appear under Tools > Edit with Copilot in the Copilot prompt box.

 

  • Not seeing it yet? Join a preview program: Enterprise users can access it via Microsoft Insider (Beta Channel) or the Frontier program. Consumer Microsoft 365 Personal/Family users can enable Frontier features in Word for the Web via File > Options > Copilot Settings.
  • Start prompting: Type a request in the prompt box. Be specific about what you want changed and where. Use / to reference other files, emails, or meeting notes as source material.
  • Anchor Copilot to real sources: Use the / command to reference specific emails, meetings, or files. Grounded prompts produce output that’s far more relevant than open‑ended requests. Example: “Update the budget section using the numbers from /Q1_Finance_Review.docx.”
  • Start with a tight editing task: Pick a short, specific task—convert a bullet list to a table, shorten the executive summary to two paragraphs, adjust the tone to be less technical. These low‑risk, high‑confidence wins build familiarity before you tackle a full document rewrite.
  • Turn on Track Changes for sensitive documents: If you want a clear record of what Copilot changed, enable Track Changes before prompting. Every AI‑generated edit will be marked for review.
  • Save reusable prompts: When a prompt produces a great result—say, a standing format for meeting recaps or a tone instruction for customer‑facing content—save it. Reusing a well‑crafted prompt is consistently faster than drafting from scratch each time.

Edit with Copilot in Word is the most significant upgrade to the Copilot‑in‑Word experience to date. The shift from “suggest changes in a panel” to “make changes in the document” closes the gap between what Copilot produces and what ends up in the final file. The underlying multi‑turn conversation model means you can iterate rather than starting over every time.

The split between Edit with Copilot (for existing documents) and the Word Agent (for new ones) is well thought out, and early testers confirm that with precise prompts, the output is solid. The Work IQ integration—pulling directly from emails, meetings, and files—is where the feature starts to feel qualitatively different from a standalone AI writing assistant.

There are limitations, but they’re manageable: the rollout is still in progress, output quality depends heavily on prompt quality, and for complex or highly organization‑specific content, human review remains essential. For organizations already invested in Microsoft 365 Copilot, an early start is well worth it: pick two or three concrete editing tasks your team does regularly, try them with Edit with Copilot, and measure the time saved.