- The report finds that 73% are aware of Copilot + PCS, but only 33% consider AI as important purchasing factors
- Many business buyers are more interested in Windows 11 support
- Price, lack of use cases and interoperability are also concerns
Although PCs are increasingly available for consumers and businesses, it seems that companies do not rush to buy them.
New data from Canalys have found approximately three -quarters (73%) of B2B partners are aware of Copilot + PC between March and April 2025, but only one in three considered important AI capacities in purchasing decisions.
Despite the huge performance updates, companies are still trying to prioritize Windows 11 refreshments and battery life on Copilot + exclusive features, especially with the end of life of Windows 10 on the horizon.
Copilot + PC do not seem to take off
Initially launched with the Qualcomm Snapdragon X fleas and later available with Intel Core Ultra 200v and AMD Risen AI 300, Copilot + PCS chips are considered high -end devices with more than 40 NPU Tops for local IA treatment.
Canalys data show almost one in four PCs (23%) sold worldwide in the last three months of 2024 was a PC of AI, but it is a general term which means different things in the industry. For canalysses, this means that the devices include a “chipset or a block for the workloads AI dedicated such as an NPU”.
However, the main analyst of context Marie-Christine Pygott The register)) Only 9% of the 1.2 million compatible PCs AI shipped by European distributors in T2 2025 classified as Copilot + PCS, meeting the 40 top requirements.
Pygott blamed the slow absorption of high prices, a lack of use cases and a low perception of what a co -pilot + PC and what it can do. Some corporate customers have also been reluctant to switch to Snapdragon -based Snapdragon chips due to software compatibility problems.
However, things could be about to change, with a recent DELL survey revealing that around three (62%), computer decision makers would prefer a co -pilot + PC to an ordinary PC.
For the future, Canalys expects 60% of PCs shipped in 2027 to be compatible with AI, 2025 potentially seeing them have a market share of 40%.