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Home » Microsoft will let you uninstall Copilot app as Windows 11 clean-up moves ahead
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Microsoft will let you uninstall Copilot app as Windows 11 clean-up moves ahead

By dailyguardian.aeMay 26, 20263 Mins Read
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Microsoft appears to be softening its aggressive AI push in Windows 11 by making it easier for users and organizations to completely remove the Copilot app from their PCs. The move comes after continued criticism from users who felt Microsoft integrated Copilot too deeply into Windows without offering enough control over the experience.

According to findings from Windows Latest, Microsoft quietly introduced a new Group Policy option in the Windows 11 April 2026 Update that allows administrators to remove the Microsoft Copilot app system-wide. The policy, named “Remove Microsoft Copilot app,” can be found under User Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Windows AI.

The change is important because Copilot has become one of Microsoft’s most controversial Windows additions in recent years. While the company heavily promotes AI as the future of Windows productivity, many users have complained about forced integrations, performance concerns, privacy worries, and the constant reappearance of Copilot after major updates or fresh Windows installations.

Microsoft is finally giving users more control

Technically, Copilot has already been removable like a normal Windows application. Users can uninstall it through the Start menu or Installed Apps settings. However, many people noticed the app sometimes returned after Windows updates or reinstallations, particularly in managed environments.

The new Group Policy option appears designed to solve that problem more permanently, especially for businesses and IT administrators managing multiple PCs. Companies can now configure Windows devices to automatically block or remove Copilot across entire organizations instead of uninstalling it manually on each machine.

Microsoft also appears to be extending the policy to cover Microsoft 365 Copilot integrations, suggesting the company recognises that not every workplace wants AI assistants enabled by default. For Windows Home users, the policy itself is not officially available, but similar results can reportedly be achieved through Registry Editor. By creating a new “WindowsAI” key and enabling a “RemoveMicrosoftCopilotApp” value, users can force Windows to remove both Copilot and Microsoft 365 Copilot apps after restarting the system.

Advanced users can also remove Copilot through PowerShell using Microsoft’s AppxPackage removal commands.

Why this matters

The bigger story here is less about uninstalling one app and more about Microsoft’s shifting AI strategy. Over the past two years, the company has integrated Copilot into nearly every part of Windows and Microsoft 365 in an attempt to position AI as a core computing experience.

Windows 11

However, user adoption remains unclear. Microsoft rarely shares specific Windows Copilot usage numbers, which has fuelled speculation that mainstream engagement may not be as strong as expected.

The backlash against AI integration has also grown across the tech industry. Many users increasingly want the option to choose which AI tools run on their devices rather than having them embedded into operating systems by default. By making Copilot easier to remove, Microsoft appears to be acknowledging that flexibility matters just as much as AI adoption.

What happens next

Microsoft is still expected to continue expanding Copilot features across Windows 11 and future versions of Windows. The company remains deeply invested in AI through its partnership with OpenAI and broader AI PC initiatives.

At the same time, the new policy suggests Microsoft may become more careful about how aggressively it forces AI features into Windows itself. For now, users who never wanted Copilot in the first place may finally have a cleaner and more reliable way to keep it off their PCs permanently.

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