Word Copilot Drafting in 2026: Write Reports, Proposals, and Documents 10x Faster
Writing documents has always been one of the most time-consuming tasks in office life. Whether you are drafting a business proposal, a project status report, a policy document, or a client summary, the blank page problem is real. In 2026, Microsoft Word's Copilot feature has fundamentally changed the way professionals write — and if you are not using it yet, you are leaving enormous amounts of time on the table.
This guide walks you through everything you need to know about using Copilot in Word to draft, rewrite, summarise, and polish documents faster than ever before. These are not theoretical future features — they are available today in Microsoft 365 subscriptions that include Copilot.
What Can Copilot in Word Do?
Copilot in Word is an AI writing assistant embedded directly inside your document. It can:
Draft entire sections or documents from a short prompt or brief
Rewrite selected text to be clearer, more concise, more formal, or more persuasive
Summarise long documents into key points or an executive summary
Continue writing from where you left off
Transform bullet points into polished prose
Adapt the tone and style of content for different audiences
Pull relevant context from your emails, meetings, and files across Microsoft 365
How to Draft a Document from Scratch with Copilot
The most impressive feature of Copilot in Word is its ability to generate a full first draft from a brief description. Here is how to do it:
Open a new blank document in Word.
You will see a Copilot icon or a Draft with Copilot prompt at the top of the page.
Click it and type a description of what you want. For example: "Write a 500-word executive summary for a project proposal about implementing a new customer relationship management system. The audience is senior leadership. Emphasise cost savings and efficiency gains."
Copilot generates a full draft in seconds.
Review the draft. You can accept it, regenerate it, or refine the prompt to get a better result.
Once you have a draft you like, use Copilot to refine individual sections.
The key to getting great results is specificity in your prompt. The more context you give Copilot — audience, purpose, tone, length, key points to include — the better the output will be.
Rewriting and Refining with Copilot
Even if you prefer to write your own first draft, Copilot is invaluable for refining it. To use Copilot to rewrite selected text:
Select the text you want to rewrite.
Right-click and choose Copilot, or click the Copilot icon that appears in the margin.
Choose from options like Make it shorter, Make it clearer, Change the tone, or type a custom instruction.
Copilot shows you the rewritten version alongside the original.
Accept, reject, or ask Copilot to try again with different instructions.
This is especially useful for email-to-document transformations. Write your thoughts informally, then ask Copilot to "make this more professional and structured for a client-facing report."
Summarising Long Documents
Need to quickly understand a 50-page report or produce an executive summary? Copilot in Word can summarise any document. Open the Copilot chat panel on the right side (click the Copilot button in the ribbon), and type "Summarise this document" or "What are the key decisions and action items in this document?" Copilot reads the entire document and provides a structured summary with citations back to the source sections.
Grounding Copilot in Your Company Context
One of the most powerful aspects of Copilot in Word in 2026 is its ability to reference your own organisation's documents, emails, and meeting notes. When drafting, you can tell Copilot to "use the Q1 strategy presentation as context" or "reference the project brief in my OneDrive." Copilot will pull relevant information from those sources to inform the draft, ensuring your document is grounded in actual company data rather than generic content.
Tips for Getting the Best Results from Word Copilot
Be specific in your prompts. Include audience, purpose, tone, and length.
Iterate rather than accept the first draft. Ask Copilot to refine, expand, or shorten sections.
Use Copilot to check for consistency in tone across a long document.
Ask Copilot to add a glossary, a table of contents, or action item list at the end of a document.
Try "What questions might a reader have about this document?" to identify gaps.
Use Copilot to translate formal reports into plain-language summaries for different audiences.
Conclusion: Your AI Writing Partner for 2026
Copilot in Word is not a replacement for your expertise and judgment — it is an accelerator. It handles the tedious, time-consuming parts of document creation so you can focus on the strategic thinking and decision-making that actually requires your attention. With Copilot, a first draft that used to take two hours can be ready in five minutes.
If you have a Microsoft 365 Copilot subscription and are not using Word Copilot on a daily basis, start today. Open a document, click Draft with Copilot, and experience the difference for yourself. And if this guide helped you, share it with a teammate who is still staring at a blank page.












