Word Mail Merge with Copilot: Personalize Mass Communications at Scale in 2026
Sending the same letter or email to hundreds of people while making each one feel personal is no small feat. Word Mail Merge has been solving this problem for decades, but in 2026 it has found a powerful new partner in Microsoft 365 Copilot. Together they let you not only merge data fields but also generate AI-personalized content for each recipient — taking mass communication to a level that simply was not possible before.
This guide walks through the complete Mail Merge workflow in Word, introduces the Copilot-assisted personalization layer, and shares practical tips for polished results.
What Is Mail Merge?
Mail Merge lets you create a single document template and combine it with a data source — like an Excel spreadsheet — to generate many unique documents in one operation. Common use cases include:
Personalized letters, invitations, and announcements
Certificates of completion or achievement
Contract templates with client-specific details
Label sheets for mailing or shipping
Email campaigns sent directly from Outlook
Step 1: Prepare Your Data Source in Excel
Before opening Word, organize your data in an Excel workbook:
The first row must be column headers — these become your merge field names in Word.
Use separate columns for first name, last name, and any individually addressable field.
No merged cells, no blank header rows, no extra whitespace inside cells.
Save the file and close it before connecting to Word.
Example columns for a customer renewal letter: FirstName, LastName, Company, ProductName, RenewalDate, CustomerTier
Step 2: Open the Mail Merge Wizard in Word
Open a new or existing Word document that will serve as your template.
Click the Mailings tab on the ribbon.
Click Start Mail Merge, then choose Step-by-Step Mail Merge Wizard from the menu.
A six-step panel opens on the right side of the screen.
Wizard Step 1: Document Type
Choose Letters for printed documents or Email Messages to send directly through Outlook.
Wizard Step 2: Starting Document
Choose "Use the current document" to work from your existing template.
Wizard Step 3: Select Recipients
Click "Use an existing list" and then Browse.
Locate your Excel file, open it, and select the correct worksheet.
A Mail Merge Recipients dialog appears — filter, sort, or deselect rows as needed.
Click OK to confirm.
Step 3: Design Your Template with Merge Fields
Write your letter template and insert merge fields wherever personalized data should appear:
Position your cursor where the recipient name should go.
On the Mailings tab, click Insert Merge Field.
A dropdown shows all column headers from your data source. Select "FirstName."
Word inserts <<FirstName>> — the double angle brackets indicate a live merge field.
Continue inserting fields throughout the document wherever data should vary.
A typical greeting line looks like: Dear <<FirstName>> <<LastName>>,
Your <<ProductName>> subscription renews on <<RenewalDate>>.
Using the Greeting Line Feature
Click Greeting Line on the Mailings tab for a dialog where you can choose a salutation format (e.g., "Dear Mr. Last Name") and a fallback for entries with missing name data.
Step 4: Use Copilot to Personalize Content
This is where Mail Merge in 2026 becomes genuinely exciting. With the Copilot panel open in Word, you can instruct it to:
Draft a personalized value proposition paragraph that references the <<ProductName>> field
Write different closing paragraphs based on a <<CustomerTier>> field
Generate an opening sentence tailored to the recipient's <<Industry>> column
For example, type in Copilot: "Write a 3-sentence paragraph for a renewal reminder letter that mentions the product name and renewal date, in a warm and professional tone." Paste the result into your template and swap static names for merge field references.
Using IF Fields for Conditional Content
Word's IF merge field lets you include different text based on a data value. Access it via Mailings > Rules > If…Then…Else. Set the field name, comparison value, and two different text blocks — one for true, one for false. This is ideal for tier-based or region-specific messages without needing to maintain multiple templates.
Step 5: Preview and Filter
Click Preview Results on the Mailings tab.
Use the arrow buttons to cycle through recipients and verify the merged output looks correct.
Watch for awkward spacing where a field was blank and fix with conditional spacing or IF fields.
To send only to a subset of your list, click Edit Recipient List and use the Filter option — for example, filter by CustomerTier = "Platinum" or RenewalDate = "2026-06-30."
Step 6: Complete the Merge
For Printed Letters
Click Finish & Merge > Print Documents. Choose to print all records, the current record, or a specific range.
For Email Merge (via Outlook)
Click Finish & Merge > Send Email Messages. Select the column containing email addresses, enter a subject line, and click OK. Word sends each personalized email through your connected Outlook account.
For Individual Word Files
Click Finish & Merge > Edit Individual Documents to create a new document with all merged letters separated by page breaks. Review, edit individual letters, then print or save as needed.
Pro Tips for Better Mail Merge Results
Use an Excel Table (Ctrl+T) as your data source — it auto-expands as you add rows.
Test with 3 to 5 rows first before merging hundreds of records.
Use TRIM and PROPER functions in Excel to clean names before the merge (e.g., fix "JOHN DOE" to "John Doe").
Add a merge field to your document footer for proof-reading: <<FirstName>> <<LastName>> helps you spot wrong data during preview.
Save your template separately from the merged output — you will run the merge again next month.
Conclusion
Mail Merge has always been one of Word's most impactful features for organizations that communicate at scale. In 2026, with Copilot helping craft more contextual and personalized content within templates, the gap between mass mailing and genuinely personal communication has never been smaller.
Set up a clean Excel data source, build a thoughtful template with merge fields, use IF rules and Copilot to add personalization depth, and always preview before sending. Done right, your recipients will feel like every letter was written just for them.












