Wix planted a flag in the enterprise collaboration space on June 15, 2026, announcing that its Wix Harmony AI website builder is now natively integrated into Microsoft 365 Copilot. From within the familiar Copilot chat interface across Word, Teams, Outlook, or the standalone Copilot app, licensed users can generate fully functional Wix websites—complete with e-commerce, bookings, and custom domains—using nothing but natural language prompts. The move merges one of the largest no-code website platforms with the productivity tool that more than 60% of Fortune 500 companies already license, instantly putting visual web creation in front of millions of knowledge workers who have never touched a content management system.

How Wix Harmony Becomes a Copilot Skill

The integration works via a dedicated "Wix Harmony" plugin that Microsoft 365 administrators can enable from the Copilot admin center. Once activated, users invoke it with a simple slash command or by describing a website need in natural language. Typing “/create a site for a dental practice with a booking calendar and a page about teeth whitening services” kicks off the Harmony engine, which draws on Wix’s library of AI-generated designs, layout components, and smart content suggestions. Within seconds, Copilot opens a side pane showing a live preview of the generated site, complete with draft copy, royalty-free images, and a mobile-responsive structure.

Unlike the standalone Wix Harmony experience, where users interact with a dedicated chatbot on the Wix dashboard, the Copilot integration layers collaboration and context on top. Because Copilot has access to the Microsoft Graph, it can pull in organizational assets—logos from SharePoint, approved color palettes from a brand kit, product descriptions from a Dynamics 365 catalog—and apply them automatically. A marketing manager drafting a campaign site inside Teams can prompt, “Build a landing page for the spring product launch, use the brand kit from the marketing site, and pull the hero image from the latest SharePoint folder,” and the result respects corporate identity without requiring manual uploads.

Real-Time Collaboration and Granular Controls

The integration doesn’t stop at site generation. Once a site is created, users can manage it conversationally: “Resize the hero image to 1200 pixels wide,” “Add a contact form with fields for name, email, and dietary restrictions,” or “Enable multilingual support with Spanish and French.” Every change appears in the preview instantly, and multiple team members can co-edit the site via a shared Copilot chat thread. Version history syncs to SharePoint if the site is stored in an organizational account, giving IT full visibility into who changed what and when.

Wix has embedded governance hooks that enterprise customers have been demanding. Copilot respects Microsoft 365 sensitivity labels; a site containing confidential material will automatically inherit the label and enforce corresponding data-loss-prevention policies. Administrators can define role-based access: only users with a “Site Builder” security group can publish live sites, while others may only generate drafts. Custom approval workflows can be layered via Power Automate, ensuring a manager signs off before any externally facing page goes live.

For e-commerce scenarios, the integration surfaces Wix’s commerce tools inside Copilot. Users can prompt, “Add a product page for the new reusable water bottles with quantity dropdown and afterpay option,” and the system will create the necessary SKU, enable the checkout flow, and even suggest shipping rules based on the Microsoft 365 user’s location. Payment processing, tax calculation, and inventory sync remain on Wix’s backend, but the setup and management happen without leaving the collaborative workspace where buyers and sellers already operate.

What This Means for IT Governance

IT departments have long walked a tightrope between empowering employees to self-serve web content and preventing a sprawl of unapproved, off-brand microsites. The Copilot integration addresses this by tying website creation to existing Azure Active Directory identities and Microsoft 365 groups. Every Wix site generated via Copilot is automatically associated with a group or team, meaning its ownership, permissions, and lifecycle are manageable from the same console that governs Teams channels and SharePoint sites. When an employee leaves the organization, their sites can be transferred or archived according to retention policies defined in Purview.

“This isn’t just about making website building easier,” said Noa Eyal, VP of Product at Wix, in a briefing with journalists. “It’s about bringing the website into the same governance fabric as the rest of the digital workplace. The site becomes a managed artifact, not a shadow IT liability.” Early adopters in the financial services sector have already configured conditional access policies that require multi-factor authentication before a site can be published to a custom domain, closing a common loophole where marketing teams bypass security reviews by hosting promotional pages on third‑party platforms.

Pricing, Licensing, and Rollout

Wix Harmony inside Copilot is available to customers who hold both a Microsoft 365 Copilot license (currently $30 per user per month) and a compatible Wix plan. Wix has introduced a new “Enterprise for Copilot” tier that starts at $25 per site per month when billed annually, which includes the AI generation, custom domain support, and priority support. Organizations with an existing Wix Enterprise agreement can add the Copilot connector at no extra charge. During the first 90 days, Wix is offering a limited free trial that allows up to three published sites per tenant, a move clearly designed to accelerate adoption.

The feature is rolling out starting June 15, 2026, with general availability expected in all Microsoft 365 regions by the end of July. Administrators will find the Wix Harmony plugin in the Copilot admin center under the “Skills” tab, where they can assign it to users, set default site storage locations, and review adoption metrics via the Microsoft 365 Usage Reports.

Competitive Landscape and What’s Next

Wix’s integration is the most comprehensive AI website builder tie-in with a major productivity suite so far. Competitors like Squarespace and Durable have offered AI generation for some time, but neither sits inside the workflow tools that businesses use every day. Microsoft itself has been inching toward DIY web creation with AI features in Power Pages, but that product focuses on low-code business apps and portals rather than full‑fledged marketing or e-commerce sites. By embedding Wix, Microsoft fills a gap without having to build a consumer‑grade website builder, while Wix gains distribution to a massive, security‑conscious customer base.

Analysts see the move as a harbinger of deeper fusion between AI‑powered creative tools and enterprise collaboration. “The next battleground is the canvas,” said Gartner analyst Kaitlin Sheridan. “Whoever lets knowledge workers create visual artifacts—websites, presentations, videos—without leaving the chat window wins the productivity war.” Wix has already hinted at future updates, including the ability to generate sites from meeting notes in Teams and to embed Copilot‑generated sites directly into Outlook emails as interactive landing pages.

For organizations weighing whether to enable the skill, the calculus is straightforward: if you already trust Wix with your external web presence and you’re invested in the Microsoft 365 ecosystem, this integration eliminates the friction of context‑switching. For those who have standardized on other site builders, it will increase pressure on those vendors to build their own Copilot connectors. Either way, the days of building a website by dragging blocks onto a blank canvas may be numbered—replaced by a conversational interface that treats a company’s entire knowledge graph as its raw material.