Business teams use AI assistants to speed up writing, editing, and organizing documents. Microsoft Copilot and Notion AI both offer these capabilities but work in very different environments. Copilot is embedded in Microsoft 365 apps like Word, Excel, and Outlook. Notion AI lives inside the Notion workspace platform. This article compares how each tool handles document creation, editing, collaboration, and integration. You will learn which tool fits your workflow and how to configure key settings for each.
Key Takeaways: Copilot vs Notion AI for Document Workflows
- Copilot in Word > Draft with Copilot: Generates text based on Microsoft Graph data or a prompt, then inserts it into an open document.
- Notion AI > Ask AI to write: Opens an inline editor inside a Notion page to draft, summarize, or rewrite content.
- Copilot > Rewrite with Copilot: Rewrites selected paragraphs in Word with adjustable tone and length options.
- Notion AI > Improve writing: Rewrites selected text inside a Notion block with tone and clarity adjustments.
- Copilot > Reference your files: Pulls data from SharePoint, OneDrive, and email to ground responses in company data.
- Notion AI > Search workspace: Retrieves content from all pages and databases within the Notion workspace.
How Copilot and Notion AI Handle Document Creation
Both tools generate new text from a prompt. The core difference is where the text goes. Copilot writes directly into a Microsoft 365 document, email, or presentation. Notion AI writes into a Notion page or database item. This section explains the creation workflow for each tool and the prerequisites you need.
Copilot Document Creation
Copilot requires a Microsoft 365 Copilot license and the latest version of Word, Excel, or PowerPoint. When you open a blank document in Word, the Copilot pane appears on the right side. You type a prompt such as “Write a project proposal for a new marketing campaign.” Copilot generates a draft and inserts it into the document. You can then edit the text manually or ask Copilot to rewrite sections. Copilot can also reference files from SharePoint or OneDrive if you include the file name in your prompt. For example, “Summarize the budget from Q3 report.docx” pulls data from that specific file.
Notion AI Document Creation
Notion AI is a paid add-on for any Notion plan. To create a document, you open a new page in Notion. Type a forward slash and select “Ask AI to write” from the menu. A text box appears where you enter your prompt, such as “Draft a weekly team update.” Notion AI generates the text and places it in a new block on the page. You can continue editing the page or ask AI to expand a section. Notion AI can also pull from existing pages in your workspace if you use the @ symbol followed by a page name.
Comparing Editing and Rewriting Features
Editing existing text is a common task in document workflows. Both tools offer rewrite, summarize, and expand functionality. The table below lists the specific commands and where to find them.
| Feature | Copilot in Word | Notion AI |
|---|---|---|
| Rewrite selected text | Right-click text > Rewrite with Copilot. Choose tone: Professional, Casual, or Concise | Select text > click the AI icon > Improve writing. Choose tone: Professional, Friendly, or Confident |
| Summarize document | Copilot pane > Summarize this document. Produces a summary at the top of the pane | Page menu > Ask AI to summarize. Inserts a summary block at the top of the page |
| Expand a paragraph | Select paragraph > Copilot icon > Expand. Adds more detail inline | Place cursor in a block > type / then Continue writing. AI extends the block |
| Change tone | Rewrite with Copilot > select tone from the dropdown | Improve writing > select tone from the popup menu |
Collaboration and Sharing Workflows
Document collaboration differs significantly between the two platforms. Copilot relies on Microsoft 365 sharing and co-authoring. Notion uses its own real-time collaboration model with comments and mentions.
Collaboration in Microsoft 365
Copilot-generated documents are standard Word, Excel, or PowerPoint files. You share them via the Share button in the app or through OneDrive. Multiple users can edit the file simultaneously. Copilot can also reference comments and tracked changes. For example, you can ask Copilot to “Summarize the comments in this document.” The AI reads the comment threads and produces a list of discussion points. This feature works only when the document is saved to OneDrive or SharePoint.
Collaboration in Notion
Notion pages are shared by inviting team members to the workspace or specific page. All collaborators see edits in real time. Comments can be added by selecting text and using the Comment button. Notion AI can summarize comments on a page. Use the command “Ask AI to summarize comments” from the page menu. Notion AI also supports page-level mentions. Type @ followed by a person’s name to notify them. The AI can then draft a response to a comment if you select the comment and choose “Reply with AI.”
Integration with Other Tools
Integration capabilities determine how much of your workflow the AI can access. Copilot connects deeply with the Microsoft Graph. Notion AI connects with Notion databases and third-party integrations via Notion API.
Copilot Integrations
Copilot reads data from Exchange Online, SharePoint, OneDrive, Teams, and Microsoft Graph. When you ask a question like “Show me the latest sales data from the CRM,” Copilot can pull from Dynamics 365 if connected. It can also reference email threads in Outlook. For document workflows, Copilot can create a Word document from an email thread or summarize a Teams meeting transcript. All integrations require the same Microsoft 365 tenant and admin consent for data access.
Notion AI Integrations
Notion AI works within the Notion environment. It can read and write to Notion databases, which are structured tables. For external integrations, you must use Notion API or third-party tools like Zapier. For example, you can connect Notion to Slack so that AI-generated summaries are posted to a channel. Notion AI cannot directly access email or calendar data. To bring external data into a document, you must manually copy it into a Notion page or use an integration to sync it.
Common Misconceptions and Limitations
Users often assume both tools work identically. They do not. Here are the key limitations to understand.
Copilot Requires Microsoft 365 Licenses for Each User
Every person who uses Copilot must have a Microsoft 365 Copilot license. This is a per-user monthly charge. The license also requires a Microsoft 365 E3 or E5 plan. Notion AI is a per-member add-on to any Notion plan. The cost difference can be significant for large teams.
Notion AI Cannot Read External Files Directly
Notion AI can only read content that is inside the Notion workspace. If you upload a PDF or Word file to a Notion page, the AI can summarize it. But it cannot open a file from your desktop or cloud storage unless you embed it first. Copilot can open files from OneDrive and SharePoint directly without manual upload.
Copilot Cannot Create New Notion Pages
Copilot has no integration with Notion. If your team uses Notion, you cannot use Copilot to generate content inside Notion pages. You would need to copy the output from Word or Outlook and paste it into Notion. Notion AI, by contrast, generates content natively inside the platform.
Copilot vs Notion AI: Key Differences for Document Workflows
| Item | Microsoft Copilot | Notion AI |
|---|---|---|
| Primary environment | Microsoft 365 apps Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams | Notion workspace pages and databases |
| Data grounding | Microsoft Graph: email, files, calendar, Teams chats | Notion workspace: pages, databases, comments |
| Rewrite command | Right-click > Rewrite with Copilot | Select text > AI icon > Improve writing |
| File reference | Type file name in prompt; Copilot opens from OneDrive or SharePoint | Use @page name; file must be embedded in Notion |
| Collaboration model | Co-authoring in OneDrive or SharePoint | Real-time editing on Notion pages |
| External integrations | Dynamics 365, Power BI, third-party via Graph connectors | Notion API, Zapier, Slack, GitHub |
| License requirement | Microsoft 365 Copilot per user + E3/E5 base plan | Notion AI add-on per member + any Notion plan |
Choose Copilot if your team works primarily in Microsoft 365 and needs AI that reads your email and calendar. Choose Notion AI if your team uses Notion as the central workspace for documentation, wikis, and project tracking. Both tools improve document workflow speed but serve different ecosystems.