Microsoft: over 20 million paying Copilot users — and they actually use it
On April 29, 2026, Microsoft announced: Copilot has over 20 million paying users — and they actually use it, rather than just maintaining a license. The…
AI-processed from TechCrunch; edited by Hamidun News
On April 29, 2026, Microsoft announced that Copilot's paid user base exceeded 20 million — and the growth encompasses not only audience size but also engagement. A direct response to years of skepticism about whether the company's AI assistant remained merely a product on paper.
Why the "nobody uses it" narrative lasted so long
Since Copilot's launch as part of Microsoft 365 in 2023, analysts and journalists have regularly pointed to a gap: many licenses are sold, but real usage is low. The argument had merit.
A corporate AI assistant is fundamentally different from a consumer chatbot. It's embedded in familiar tools — Word, Excel, Teams, Outlook — but requires a behavioral shift: instead of searching Google, messaging a colleague, or opening a file manually, users need to ask AI first. This barrier isn't automatically overcome when a license is activated.
Analysts documented: employees tried Copilot a few times, found no obvious scenario where it saved time, and reverted to familiar workflows. The gap between license volume and actual usage became a recurring argument in comparative reviews of Microsoft against Google Gemini for Workspace and other corporate AI tools.
Microsoft addressed this systematically: expanding the catalog of use cases, adding agents for proactive assistance (meeting summaries, email drafts, spreadsheet analysis), and deepening integration with corporate data through Microsoft Graph. Each step removed a specific engagement barrier.
What the 20 million milestone means
- More than 20 million paid Copilot users — as of April 29, 2026
- Growth measured simultaneously in user numbers and engagement levels
- Microsoft deliberately emphasizes "real usage," not the count of paid licenses
The emphasis is fundamental. Copilot is included in several Microsoft 365 corporate packages, so significantly more than 20 million licenses are sold. When the company cites this specific figure, it refers to people who have opened the assistant and interact with it regularly.
For a corporate SaaS product, 20 million also represents critical mass for a feedback loop: the more active users, the more accurately AI understands real work patterns, which improves answer quality and further stimulates engagement.
What Copilot's growth means for the market
For competitors — Google with Gemini for Workspace, Salesforce with Einstein AI, Atlassian with Rovo — these numbers set a benchmark: a corporate AI assistant can be monetized through real usage, not just through package licenses.
For corporate customers, the signal is different: widespread adoption means teams that learned to work effectively with an AI assistant gain an advantage over those who pay but don't use it.
What this means
Microsoft has shifted from defense to offense: 20 million active users is an argument hard to counter with references to skeptical surveys. The next substantive question is how sustainable this growth is and what real daily usage scenarios look like for the average corporate customer.
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