Microsoft to Retire Popular Editor Extensions on Edge and Chrome
Microsoft announced that its AI-powered Editor browser extensions for Microsoft Edge and Google Chrome will be retired effective October 31, 2025.
With this move, the company aims to streamline its writing-assistance offerings by integrating the core capabilities of Microsoft Editor directly into Microsoft Edge’s built-in proofing experience.
No administrative action is required; users can continue using the extensions until retirement and will automatically transition to the enhanced, native experience thereafter.
Evolution of Microsoft Editor
Since its introduction, Microsoft Editor has offered real-time grammar, spelling, and style guidance across web-based text fields, helping millions of users craft clear and confident content.
By embedding these features into Edge itself, Microsoft seeks to eliminate the need for separate installations, reduce compatibility concerns, and accelerate the deployment of AI advancements.
“Consolidating writing assistance into the built-in proofing tools in Microsoft Edge simplifies the experience and ensures users benefit from the latest AI-powered enhancements without needing separate installations,” the company stated in Message ID MC1144651.
Once the extensions retire, they will no longer receive updates or support. However, all major functions of Microsoft Editor—grammar checks, spelling corrections, and stylistic suggestions—will remain accessible, now powered directly by Edge. Key benefits include:
- Smarter suggestions: Advanced AI-driven insights based on the latest language models.
- Seamless integration: Proofing and editing tools available out-of-the-box in Edge’s address and text input fields.
- Automatic updates: Users gain immediate access to new features and improvements without manual extension updates.
Administrators and end users need not configure any policies or undertake migrations: the retirement requires no action, and the transition is transparent.
For organizations that track or log writing-assistance interactions—particularly under Purview compliance frameworks—the retirement may alter how these events are recorded.
Previously, usage data flowed through the separate Editor extension; going forward, logs and telemetry will originate from Edge’s internal proofing layer.
Administrators should review any existing monitoring dashboards to ensure continuous compliance reporting.
Additionally, the integrated feature can be toggled by end users via Edge’s Settings > Languages and grammar section, giving individuals control over enabling or disabling writing assistance as needed.
To facilitate a smooth shift:
- Communicate the change: Inform staff and stakeholders about the impending retirement and the new integrated experience.
- Encourage exploration: Recommend that users familiarize themselves with Edge’s built-in proofing features before October 31.
- Review compliance settings: Update logging and monitoring configurations to track proofing events at the browser level.
Microsoft remains committed to enhancing writing assistance across its platforms.
By retiring the standalone Editor extensions and reinforcing Edge’s native proofing tools, the company aims to deliver more powerful, seamless support in the writing process—without the hassle of separate add-ons.
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