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AppsMicrosoftProductivityTech

The new Microsoft 365 icons are softer, brighter, and inspired by Copilot

Microsoft’s first major Office icon redesign since 2018 introduces curvy forms, layered gradients, and a more approachable visual language for all users.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Oct 5, 2025, 7:07 AM EDT
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Colorful 3D icons representing Microsoft Office apps, including PowerPoint, Excel, Word, Outlook, OneNote, SharePoint, and Teams, are displayed on white pedestals against a light background.
Image: Microsoft
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If you’ve been doing the small-things-that-matter design exercise — the ones that take up no screen real estate but say everything about a brand — Microsoft just handed everyone a bright new paragraph to underline. This week, the company rolled out a refresh of the ten core Microsoft 365 (Office) app icons: softer corners, richer gradients, a little 3D-ish depth, and a design language that openly nods to Copilot and Microsoft’s Fluent work. It’s the first big icon redesign since 2018, and it’s worth paying attention to not because icons are glamorous, but because they’re shorthand for where Microsoft thinks its products are headed.

Icons are literal postage-stamp brand ambassadors — you don’t click them because they’re cute, but because they should tell you, in an instant, what you’re opening. Microsoft’s new set leans into fluid, fold-like shapes that feel less like solid tiles and more like little gestures: curves instead of corners, layered surfaces instead of blocks of color. Jon Friedman, Microsoft’s corporate VP of design and research for Microsoft 365, frames the update as a continuation of ideas the team has used before — “connection, coherence, seamless collaboration, fluid transitions” — but now tuned to an era where AI and Copilot are part of the product story. The design team’s blog lays out those goals and the visual thinking behind the refresh.

One of the clearest throughlines in Microsoft’s messaging is Copilot. The company says the Copilot icon and its visual metaphor helped steer the new Office icon language: folds, flows, and a visual sense of “interaction” rather than static objects. That’s not accidental. Microsoft wants Copilot to feel like a native part of Office — not an add-on — and the icons are one of the most public, everyday places to telegraph that integration.

The tweaks are small but practical. Take Word, the icon used to use four horizontal bars to signal text; the new version drops to three to improve legibility at tiny sizes. Gradients have been made bolder and more deliberate, with “exaggerated analogous transitions” designed to increase contrast and accessibility. Across apps, sharp, blocky geometry has been softened into folds and layers that hint at movement and approachability — a visual cue Microsoft says matches how people are expected to work with AI features that are supposed to be more conversational and fluid.

Colorful 3D icons representing various Microsoft Office apps, including Word, PowerPoint, Teams, Excel, SharePoint, OneDrive, Outlook, and OneNote, arranged in a circular pattern on a light background.
Image: Microsoft
A grid shows the evolution of Microsoft Office app icons from 1995 to 2019, arranged by year and app, with each app's icon style changing over time in colorful columns.
Image: Microsoft

Design trends don’t exist in a bubble. Over the last couple of years, we’ve seen major tech brands lean into more tactile, colorful, and “friendly” marks as interfaces get busier and product lines broaden. There are practical reasons behind the polish: subtle depth and richer gradients can improve recognizability on mixed backgrounds (dark mode, pinned toolbars, tiny mobile icons). Microsoft also notes accessibility as a driver — better contrast and clearer shapes help users who rely on high contrast or low-vision settings. In other words, it’s not just pretty; it’s a small UX win for a lot of people.

The rollout — who sees it and when

Microsoft says the icons will begin rolling out across web, desktop, and mobile “in the coming weeks,” for consumers and commercial Microsoft 365 customers alike. Early adopters and some insider builds are already showing the icons, so you might spot them before they land everywhere. The release is being coordinated with other changes around Copilot and Microsoft 365, so expect the icons to appear as part of a broader set of updates rather than a stand-alone tweak. For enterprises, IT admins will want to note timing and how the changes propagate in managed environments.

If you’re the sort of person who lives in the document and couldn’t care less what the icon looks like — same. These are evolutionary, not revolutionary changes. But for designers, brand watchers, and product folks, the refresh is a useful signal: Microsoft is committing to a more cohesive, AI-aware visual vocabulary across its apps. That matters when a logo shift is part of a larger product pivot (Copilot integration, UI tweaks, and new subscription bundles have all been showing up in Microsoft’s roadmap).

Design updates like this are less about the pixels and more about posture. Microsoft is betting that the future of productivity is not discrete apps doing one thing each, but a fluid canvas where AI helps you stitch tasks together. By refreshing the icons to look more like the Copilot visual language — softer, layered, and more “alive” — Microsoft is nudging users to perceive the suite as more unified and intelligent. Whether that feels welcome or just cosmetic will depend on how well the underlying AI features actually help people get work done.

If you want to play icon-spotter: check your app trays, taskbars, and phone home screens over the next few weeks. The tiny, colorful tiles are about to change, and in doing so, they’ll quietly announce Microsoft’s next visual chapter — one that’s curvy, bright, and designed to say: “we’re thinking in motion now.”


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