Microsoft 365 Copilot expands to 48 languages, adds six more in latest update

The AI assistant is becoming more global


Microsoft 365 was rebranded as Microsoft 365 Copilot

Microsoft’s AI assistant, 365 Copilot, just became a lot more global. With the addition of six more languages, Albanian, Filipino, Icelandic, Malay, Maltese, and Serbian (Cyrillic), the total number of supported languages is now up to 48.

The update means more people across the world can draft content, summarize data, and generate presentations in their own language. Support for Filipino and Malay alone gives access to hundreds of millions of new users.

Microsoft has also given attention to detail with the addition of Serbian in Cyrillic script, complementing the existing Latin support, and showing it’s serious about regions with dual script usage.

Not all features are rolling out at once, though. Most Copilot experiences are already available in the newly added languages, but integration with OneDrive and Loop will roll out more slowly. Microsoft expects those to be fully available by the end of Q3 2025.

This update strengthens Copilot’s appeal to international businesses and multilingual teams. The full list of supported languages now spans everything from Arabic and Japanese to Welsh and Ukrainian. Microsoft says it plans to keep expanding, though it didn’t confirm what languages are next.

For users trying to use unsupported languages, Copilot will show an error and ask for a supported prompt instead. So if you’ve been waiting to try Copilot in one of the newly added languages, you can start now. Just don’t expect every feature immediately.

More about the topics: Copilot, Microsoft 365

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