Microsoft’s new Copilot Tasks finally does the work for you

    By Paulo Vargas
Published February 27, 2026

Microsoft just turned its AI assistant into someone who actually clocks in. Copilot Tasks, a research preview announced today, stops the chitchat and starts doing multi-step work while you focus on other things. No more generating text you still have to act on. This version books, cancels, unsubscribes, and tracks stuff across the web with its own browser.

You describe what needs doing. It figures out the rest.

The shift is simple but significant. Chatbots gave us answers. Copilot Tasks aims to give us completed items from the to-do list. Microsoft is letting a small group try it today, with plans to bring more people in over the next few weeks.

The company shared examples that sound less like tech demos and more like actual chores you’d hand off. You can set it to surface urgent emails with draft replies every evening. It will unsubscribe from newsletters you never open. It can track new apartment listings each Friday and book showings.

For work, it turns a syllabus into a study plan with practice tests and scheduled focus time. It builds slide decks from emails and attachments. Job hunters can have it watch for relevant listings, then tailor a resume and cover letter for each one.

It also handles shopping and logistics. Planning a birthday party? It will find a venue, send invites, and collect RSVPs. It monitors hotel rates and rebooks when prices drop. It scans used car listings, contacts dealerships, and schedules test drives. It runs while you rest.

Copilot Tasks operates with its own computer and browser, coordinating across services without you watching every step. But Microsoft stresses this isn’t autopilot. The system asks before spending money or sending messages. You can pause or cancel anything.

You describe what you need naturally. Copilot figures out the steps, whether that means browsing the web, creating documents, managing your calendar, or contacting businesses. It works in the background and reports back when finished. Recurring tasks run daily or weekly. One-off jobs just run once. You always get the final say.

The feature launches today as a research preview for a limited group. Microsoft wants real-world feedback before expanding. More people will get access in the coming weeks ahead of the full release.

You can join the waitlist now. Microsoft will notify you if you’re selected. The company calls this the beginning of AI that works for everyone, not just developers. For now, the message is straightforward: assistants that actually assist are finally here.

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