Power Apps Copilot and Agent Builder in 2026: Build Business Apps and AI Agents Without Code
Every office has a handful of processes still running on spreadsheets, email chains, and someone's memory — a supply request form, an equipment checkout log, a client intake tracker. Power Apps has always let non-developers build simple apps to replace those workflows, but building one still meant learning formulas, screens, and data connections. In 2026, Copilot inside Power Apps and the new Agent Builder templates remove most of that learning curve. You describe what you need in plain language, and Copilot assembles a working app or AI agent around your data.
Here's what changed, and how to build your first AI-assisted app this week.
From Power Apps to Copilot-Built Apps
Microsoft 365 Copilot capabilities are now built directly into Power Apps, available generally in model-driven apps and in preview for canvas apps. Instead of starting from a blank canvas, you describe the app: "Build an app for my team to submit and track equipment repair requests, with a status field and photo upload." Copilot proposes a data structure, generates the necessary screens, and wires up navigation — leaving you to adjust fields, colors, and logic rather than build from zero.
New app skills also ship generally available inside Power Apps:
**Data entry assistance** — Copilot pre-fills and validates form fields based on patterns in existing records
**Data exploration** — users can ask natural-language questions about the app's underlying data without writing a query
**Visualization** — Copilot generates charts and summaries from app data on request
**Summarization** — long text fields, like request descriptions or notes, get automatic AI summaries inside the app itself
Building Your First App With Copilot
Open Power Apps and choose "Create with Copilot"
Describe the app's purpose and the information it needs to track, in a sentence or two
Review the data structure Copilot proposes — add or remove fields before generating screens
Let Copilot generate the initial screens, then use the visual designer to adjust layout, branding, and field order
Turn on relevant app skills (data entry help, exploration, summarization) from the app settings panel
Publish and share the app with your team directly from Power Apps or embed it inside a Teams channel
Most simple internal tools — request trackers, inventory logs, approval forms — can go from description to working app in under thirty minutes this way, compared to the hours or days it used to take building screens and data connections manually.
Agent Builder: Beyond Apps, Into Autonomous Tasks
Where Power Apps builds interactive tools people use directly, Agent Builder creates AI agents that act on your behalf inside a workflow. New templates in Agent Builder target specific document-heavy tasks: drafting complex documents from a set of source materials, validating a document against a compliance checklist, or editing text to match a specific writing style guide. Rather than building an app screen by screen, you configure an agent's job, give it access to the relevant data sources, and let it run the task when triggered.
A practical example: an HR team could build an agent that reviews new job postings against a company style and compliance checklist automatically whenever a draft is saved to a shared folder, flagging issues before a human ever reviews it. The agent doesn't replace the reviewer — it does the first pass, so the reviewer's time goes to judgment calls instead of formatting checks.
Connected App Experiences in Copilot Chat
Agents built in Copilot Studio, including ones assembled through Agent Builder, can now surface directly inside Copilot Chat as interactive experiences. That means a coworker doesn't need to open a separate app to use what you built — they can review data, approve a request, or trigger an action from within the same chat window where they already ask Copilot questions. This is a meaningful shift: the tools you build stop living in a separate app icon and start living wherever your team already works.
Where to Start
If your team has a manual process that involves a spreadsheet, an email thread, and a person remembering to follow up, it's a strong candidate for a first Copilot-built app. Start with something narrow and well-understood — a request form, a simple tracker — rather than trying to replace an entire departmental system on the first attempt. Once you see how quickly a description turns into a working tool, the bigger, more ambitious builds get a lot less intimidating.
The Bigger Shift
No-code tooling has existed for years, but the gap between "no-code" and "actually easy" was real — most no-code platforms still demanded a working mental model of data structures and logic. Copilot inside Power Apps and Agent Builder close that gap by letting plain descriptions do the first draft of the work. For business users who've never built software before, that's the difference between a tool staying a good idea and it actually shipping.













