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Microsoft reunifies Windows engineering under single division

Microsoft reunifies Windows engineering under single division

Aytun ÇelebibyAytun Çelebi
30 September 2025
in Tech
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Microsoft is restructuring its Windows division to bring its primary engineering teams back together under a single organization. The reorganization was announced internally by Pavan Davuluri, who was recently promoted to the role of president of Windows and devices.

In a memo detailing the changes, Davuluri explained the rationale behind the move. “This change unifies Windows engineering work under a single organization,” Davuluri wrote. “Moving the teams working on Windows client and server together into one organization brings focus to delivering against our priorities.”

This move represents the first significant Windows reorganization since Davuluri was appointed as the chief of Windows and Surface more than a year ago. Following this change, the leaders of several key Windows teams will now report directly to Davuluri. These teams include Core OS, Data Intelligence and Fundamentals, Security, and Engineering Systems. The new structure consolidates the majority of engineering work for the Windows operating system under one divisional leader, a departure from the previous model where responsibility was shared with Microsoft’s Azure teams.

The decision reverses a major organizational split that occurred in 2018. At that time, after the departure of former Windows chief Terry Myerson, Microsoft divided the Windows platform. The core platform team was integrated into the Azure division, while the client-facing aspects of Windows were moved into a newly created Experiences & Devices team. A partial reunification occurred in 2020 when then-chief Panos Panay brought back some of the Windows fundamentals and developer experience teams. However, the core engineering teams for Windows remained separate from the groups shipping products like Windows 11 until this latest reorganization.

While the reunification brings the bulk of Windows development under Davuluri, some low-level platform components will remain under the purview of Microsoft’s Azure teams. “There are clear areas where we know we will continue to work with and support the Azure organization, such as in Storage and Networking and Security,” Davuluri’s memo specified. “Likewise, we will continue to have dependencies from the core kernel and virtualization and Linux teams, now part of Azure Core, to provide the foundational support for client scenarios, silicon enablement, and WSL.”

The consolidation of the Windows teams places more responsibility on Davuluri, particularly as Microsoft intensifies its efforts to integrate artificial intelligence features throughout the operating system. Davuluri stated that the new structure will help the company “deliver our vision of Windows as an Agentic OS.”

In line with this AI focus, Microsoft recently launched the Windows AI Labs program to trial experimental artificial intelligence capabilities inside Windows 11. Over the past several months, the company has also added multiple AI-driven features to the operating system, including a Copilot Vision tool and an AI-powered agent within the Settings application.

Tags: MicrosoftWindows
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Aytun Çelebi

Aytun Çelebi

Starting with coding on Commodore 64 in elementary school moving to web programming in his teenage years, Aytun has been around technology for over 30 years, and he has been a tech journalist for over 20 years now. He worked in many major Turkish outlets (newspapers, magazines, TV channels and websites) and managed some. Besides journalism, he worked as a copywriter and PR manager (for Lenovo, HP and many international brands ) in agencies. He founded his agency, Linkmedya in 2019 to execute his way of producing content. He is recently interested in AI, automation and MarTech.

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