Microsoft is launching a big update to Copilot on Windows that introduces two major features: connectors for linking accounts and the ability to generate and export documents from chat. The rollout starts now with Windows Insiders and will expand later.

The connectors feature lets users link personal services — such as OneDrive, Outlook (email, contacts, calendar), Google Drive, Gmail, Google Calendar, and Google Contacts — so Copilot can search across all of them using natural language. For example, you can ask “what’s Sarah’s email address?” or “find my notes from last week,” and Copilot will pull information from whichever connected account has it, as per Microsoft’s blog post. Importantly, these connections are opt-in, so you must enable them in Copilot’s settings under the Connectors section.

OneDrive file search in Copilot on Windows
Credit: Microsoft

This change allows Copilot to serve as a more unified productivity hub, combining messaging, storage, and content creation in one place. Connecting Outlook or Gmail lets Copilot retrieve inbox content, such as invoices or contact information, from your email accounts. The idea is to make Copilot feel like a central assistant for Windows 11, bringing together document creation and cloud-account sync in a way that’s more integrated and less fragmented.

Turn chats into Word docs, Excel sheets, or PDFs Instantly

On the document side, Copilot can now create and export files directly from a chat session. Want a Word doc, an Excel sheet, a PowerPoint slide, or PDF from text or a table? Just ask. If a response exceeds 600 characters, Copilot presents a default “Export” button so you can send it straight into one of those formats without extra steps.

Document creation and export in Copilot on Windows
Credit: Microsoft

In short, Microsoft is pushing Copilot beyond chat and turning it into a workspace tool. This is part of Microsoft’s effort to make Copilot a centralized productivity hub on Windows. And it links tightly to changes already happening in the Microsoft 365 ecosystem. For example, in Outlook you can now get summaries of attachments (Word, PowerPoint, PDF) directly in the reading pane without opening them. Copilot Chat is also being integrated into Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and OneNote, allowing you to prompt and refine content within these apps. Meanwhile, a sidebar in classic Outlook now places Copilot chat in the context of what you’re reading or writing.

This update, version 1.25095.161.0 and above, arrives via the Microsoft Store to users in Insider channels. Because it’s rolling out gradually, not all Insiders will see the features immediately. As it rolls out, how well it handles complex files or permissions will be something to watch.