- Status: Retired/Cancelled
- Affected Feature: Microsoft Edge AI History Search (Enhanced Search)
- Roadmap Entry: ID 495834 (Updated June 25, 2026)
Microsoft has officially pulled the plug on its AI-powered history search feature in Microsoft Edge. The company updated the relevant entry on the Microsoft 365 Roadmap (ID 495834) with a note dated June 25, 2026, stating: “We have decided not to move forward with this change at this time.”
Why the feature was removed
The AI history search, also known as “Enhanced Search,” allowed users to find sites in their browsing history using synonyms, phrases, or even typos. Microsoft originally marketed the tool as a privacy-first feature, emphasizing that it used an on-device model trained on local data that never left the user’s machine.
Despite these assurances, the feature faced significant backlash from the community. Many users described the concept of AI scanning their browsing habits as “creepy.” Others expressed skepticism about trusting Microsoft to keep sensitive browsing data strictly on-device, regardless of the company’s promises.
Part of a broader de-bloating effort
This cancellation aligns with Microsoft’s wider Windows K2 initiative, which aims to improve the Windows 11 user experience by reducing unnecessary clutter. In recent months, Microsoft has scaled back Copilot integrations across the interface and abandoned plans to bring AI assistants into notifications and settings.
By retiring the Edge history search, Microsoft appears to be listening to feedback that labels such additions as “bloatware.” The move simplifies the browser’s feature set and addresses privacy anxieties without requiring users to manually disable policies like EdgeHistoryAISearchEnabled.
What this means for you
If you were using Edge, your history search will revert to standard text matching. You won’t lose access to your browsing data; the AI layer simply disappears. For users who had disabled the feature via Group Policy or Intune, no action is required—the feature is being removed globally.
This change reinforces a trend toward leaner software experiences in Windows 11. If you’ve been frustrated by aggressive AI integrations, this retirement is a small but welcome step back toward user control.
Source: Windows Central
Over to you: Did you use the AI history search in Edge, or were you relieved to see it go?
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