(Updated) Manage agent permissions directly in Microsoft Admin Center (MAC)

Message Center ID: MC1147969
Microsoft 365 suite Microsoft Copilot (Microsoft 365)
Stay Informed
New feature Admin impact
September 2025 October 2025 November 2025
Desktop Web

Summary

Microsoft Admin Center will enable admins to manage agent permissions directly with a unified view of consents and risk levels. Global Admin consent allows AI Admin Role to deploy agents. Rollout begins late September 2025, improving efficiency, transparency, and introducing automation for low-risk agents.

Details

Updated September 16, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience.

[Introduction]

The new Unified Permissions Management feature gives admins a consistent view of all required applications and delegated permissions, along with their associated risk levels. This enables clearer understanding of consents and supports more informed decision-making. From the Permissions tab, admins can now provide consent directly, and once granted by the Global Admin, the AI Admin Role can deploy agents.

user settings

This message is associated with Roadmap ID 502617.

[When this will happen:]

General Availability (Worldwide): Rollout is expected to begin in late September 2025 (previously early September) and complete by early October 2025 (previously mid-September).

[How this affects your organization:]

Who is affected: Admins managing agent deployment and consent in Microsoft 365.

What will happen:

  • Permissions are now surfaced earlier in the agent lifecycle, rather than being embedded in deployment steps—supporting informed decision-making.
  • Admins can manage these permissions directly from the Microsoft Admin Center (MAC), reducing workflow interruptions and improving operational efficiency.
  • The AI Admin Role can deploy agents once consent is granted by a Global Admin.
  • Each permission will display a risk level to help assess impact.
  • Automation scenarios will be available to streamline low-risk agent enablement.

[What you can do to prepare:]

  • Provide consent from the Permissions tab: Admins will be able to grant consent directly from the Permissions tab. (ETA: End of September)
  • Deploy and consent independently: The AI Admin Role will be able to deploy agents once consent is granted by a Global Admin. (ETA: End of September)
  • Review risk levels per permission: Each permission will display a risk level to support informed decision-making. (ETA: October)
  • Plan for rule-based automation: Automation scenarios will be available to streamline low-risk agent enablement. (ETA: November)

[Compliance considerations:]

Compliance ConsiderationExplanation
Does the change alter how existing customer data is processed, stored, or accessed?Permissions and associated risk levels are now surfaced earlier in the agent lifecycle and made actionable from the MAC interface, which changes how consent and access to customer data are managed.
Does the change introduce or significantly modify AI/ML or agent capabilities that interact with or provide access to customer data?The AI Admin Role can now deploy agents once consent is granted, introducing new agent deployment capabilities tied to customer data access.
Does the change include an admin control and, can it be controlled through Entra ID group membership?Admins can grant consent directly from the Permissions Tab, and deployment is gated by Global Admin consent, which can be managed via Entra ID roles.

Change History

September 16, 2025 at 6:30 PM Updated
Summary
Previous
Microsoft Admin Center now offers Unified Permissions Management, letting admins view and manage agent permissions and risks earlier in deployment. Global Admin consent enables AI Admins to deploy agents. Rollout starts late September 2025, improving decision-making, operational efficiency, and supporting automation for low-risk agents.
New
Microsoft Admin Center will enable admins to manage agent permissions directly with a unified view of consents and risk levels. Global Admin consent allows AI Admin Role to deploy agents. Rollout begins late September 2025, improving efficiency, transparency, and introducing automation for low-risk agents.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-09-16T15:56:04.767Z
New
2025-09-16T16:15:18.743Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated September 16, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience.

[Introduction]

The new Unified Permissions Management feature gives admins a consistent view of all required applications and delegated permissions, along with their associated risk levels. This enables clearer understanding of consents and supports more informed decision-making. From the Permissions tab, admins can now provide consent directly, and once granted by the Global Admin, the AI Admin Role can deploy agents.

user settings

This message is associated with Roadmap ID 502617.

[When this will happen:]

General Availability (Worldwide): Rollout will begin in late September 2025 (previously mid-September) and is expected to complete by late September 2025.

[How this affects your organization:]

Who is affected: Admins managing agent deployment and consent in Microsoft 365.

What will happen:

  • Permissions are now surfaced earlier in the agent lifecycle, rather than being embedded in deployment steps—supporting informed decision-making.
  • Admins can manage these permissions directly from the Microsoft Admin Center (MAC), reducing workflow interruptions and improving operational efficiency.
  • The AI Admin Role can deploy agents once consent is granted by a Global Admin.
  • Each permission will display a risk level to help assess impact.
  • Automation scenarios will be available to streamline low-risk agent enablement.

[What you can do to prepare:]

  • Provide consent from the Permissions tab: Admins will be able to grant consent directly from the Permissions tab. (ETA: End of September)
  • Deploy and consent independently: The AI Admin Role will be able to deploy agents once consent is granted by a Global Admin. (ETA: End of September)
  • Review risk levels per permission: Each permission will display a risk level to support informed decision-making. (ETA: October)
  • Plan for rule-based automation: Automation scenarios will be available to streamline low-risk agent enablement. (ETA: November)

[Compliance considerations:]

Compliance ConsiderationExplanation
Does the change alter how existing customer data is processed, stored, or accessed?Permissions and associated risk levels are now surfaced earlier in the agent lifecycle and made actionable from the MAC interface, which changes how consent and access to customer data are managed.
Does the change introduce or significantly modify AI/ML or agent capabilities that interact with or provide access to customer data?The AI Admin Role can now deploy agents once consent is granted, introducing new agent deployment capabilities tied to customer data access.
Does the change include an admin control and, can it be controlled through Entra ID group membership?Admins can grant consent directly from the Permissions Tab, and deployment is gated by Global Admin consent, which can be managed via Entra ID roles.

New

Updated September 16, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience.

[Introduction]

The new Unified Permissions Management feature gives admins a consistent view of all required applications and delegated permissions, along with their associated risk levels. This enables clearer understanding of consents and supports more informed decision-making. From the Permissions tab, admins can now provide consent directly, and once granted by the Global Admin, the AI Admin Role can deploy agents.

user settings

This message is associated with Roadmap ID 502617.

[When this will happen:]

General Availability (Worldwide): Rollout is expected to begin in late September 2025 (previously early September) and complete by early October 2025 (previously mid-September).

[How this affects your organization:]

Who is affected: Admins managing agent deployment and consent in Microsoft 365.

What will happen:

  • Permissions are now surfaced earlier in the agent lifecycle, rather than being embedded in deployment steps—supporting informed decision-making.
  • Admins can manage these permissions directly from the Microsoft Admin Center (MAC), reducing workflow interruptions and improving operational efficiency.
  • The AI Admin Role can deploy agents once consent is granted by a Global Admin.
  • Each permission will display a risk level to help assess impact.
  • Automation scenarios will be available to streamline low-risk agent enablement.

[What you can do to prepare:]

  • Provide consent from the Permissions tab: Admins will be able to grant consent directly from the Permissions tab. (ETA: End of September)
  • Deploy and consent independently: The AI Admin Role will be able to deploy agents once consent is granted by a Global Admin. (ETA: End of September)
  • Review risk levels per permission: Each permission will display a risk level to support informed decision-making. (ETA: October)
  • Plan for rule-based automation: Automation scenarios will be available to streamline low-risk agent enablement. (ETA: November)

[Compliance considerations:]

Compliance ConsiderationExplanation
Does the change alter how existing customer data is processed, stored, or accessed?Permissions and associated risk levels are now surfaced earlier in the agent lifecycle and made actionable from the MAC interface, which changes how consent and access to customer data are managed.
Does the change introduce or significantly modify AI/ML or agent capabilities that interact with or provide access to customer data?The AI Admin Role can now deploy agents once consent is granted, introducing new agent deployment capabilities tied to customer data access.
Does the change include an admin control and, can it be controlled through Entra ID group membership?Admins can grant consent directly from the Permissions Tab, and deployment is gated by Global Admin consent, which can be managed via Entra ID roles.

September 16, 2025 at 4:30 PM Updated
Title
Previous
Manage agent permissions directly in Microsoft Admin Center (MAC)
New
(Updated) Manage agent permissions directly in Microsoft Admin Center (MAC)
Summary
Previous
Microsoft Admin Center will enable admins to manage agent permissions with a unified view of applications, consents, and risk levels. Global Admins grant consent, allowing AI Admin Role to deploy agents. Rollout starts mid-September 2025, improving decision-making, efficiency, and automation for low-risk agents.
New
Microsoft Admin Center now offers Unified Permissions Management, letting admins view and manage agent permissions and risks earlier in deployment. Global Admin consent enables AI Admins to deploy agents. Rollout starts late September 2025, improving decision-making, operational efficiency, and supporting automation for low-risk agents.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-09-04T22:54:52.490Z
New
2025-09-16T15:56:04.767Z
Tags
Previous
New feature,Admin impact
New
Updated message,New feature,Admin impact
Body Content
Previous

[Introduction]

The new Unified Permissions Management feature gives admins a consistent view of all required applications and delegated permissions, along with their associated risk levels. This enables clearer understanding of consents and supports more informed decision-making. From the Permissions tab, admins can now provide consent directly, and once granted by the Global Admin, the AI Admin Role can deploy agents.

user settings

This message is associated with Roadmap ID 502617.

[When this will happen:]

General Availability (Worldwide): Rollout will begin in mid-September 2025 and is expected to complete by late September 2025.

[How this affects your organization:]

Who is affected: Admins managing agent deployment and consent in Microsoft 365.

What will happen:

  • Permissions are now surfaced earlier in the agent lifecycle, rather than being embedded in deployment steps—supporting informed decision-making.
  • Admins can manage these permissions directly from the Microsoft Admin Center (MAC), reducing workflow interruptions and improving operational efficiency.
  • The AI Admin Role can deploy agents once consent is granted by a Global Admin.
  • Each permission will display a risk level to help assess impact.
  • Automation scenarios will be available to streamline low-risk agent enablement.

[What you can do to prepare:]

  • Provide consent from the Permissions tab: Admins will be able to grant consent directly from the Permissions tab. (ETA: End of September)
  • Deploy and consent independently: The AI Admin Role will be able to deploy agents once consent is granted by a Global Admin. (ETA: End of September)
  • Review risk levels per permission: Each permission will display a risk level to support informed decision-making. (ETA: October)
  • Plan for rule-based automation: Automation scenarios will be available to streamline low-risk agent enablement. (ETA: November)

[Compliance considerations:]

Compliance ConsiderationExplanation
Does the change alter how existing customer data is processed, stored, or accessed?Permissions and associated risk levels are now surfaced earlier in the agent lifecycle and made actionable from the MAC interface, which changes how consent and access to customer data are managed.
Does the change introduce or significantly modify AI/ML or agent capabilities that interact with or provide access to customer data?The AI Admin Role can now deploy agents once consent is granted, introducing new agent deployment capabilities tied to customer data access.
Does the change include an admin control and, can it be controlled through Entra ID group membership?Admins can grant consent directly from the Permissions Tab, and deployment is gated by Global Admin consent, which can be managed via Entra ID roles.

New

Updated September 16, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience.

[Introduction]

The new Unified Permissions Management feature gives admins a consistent view of all required applications and delegated permissions, along with their associated risk levels. This enables clearer understanding of consents and supports more informed decision-making. From the Permissions tab, admins can now provide consent directly, and once granted by the Global Admin, the AI Admin Role can deploy agents.

user settings

This message is associated with Roadmap ID 502617.

[When this will happen:]

General Availability (Worldwide): Rollout will begin in late September 2025 (previously mid-September) and is expected to complete by late September 2025.

[How this affects your organization:]

Who is affected: Admins managing agent deployment and consent in Microsoft 365.

What will happen:

  • Permissions are now surfaced earlier in the agent lifecycle, rather than being embedded in deployment steps—supporting informed decision-making.
  • Admins can manage these permissions directly from the Microsoft Admin Center (MAC), reducing workflow interruptions and improving operational efficiency.
  • The AI Admin Role can deploy agents once consent is granted by a Global Admin.
  • Each permission will display a risk level to help assess impact.
  • Automation scenarios will be available to streamline low-risk agent enablement.

[What you can do to prepare:]

  • Provide consent from the Permissions tab: Admins will be able to grant consent directly from the Permissions tab. (ETA: End of September)
  • Deploy and consent independently: The AI Admin Role will be able to deploy agents once consent is granted by a Global Admin. (ETA: End of September)
  • Review risk levels per permission: Each permission will display a risk level to support informed decision-making. (ETA: October)
  • Plan for rule-based automation: Automation scenarios will be available to streamline low-risk agent enablement. (ETA: November)

[Compliance considerations:]

Compliance ConsiderationExplanation
Does the change alter how existing customer data is processed, stored, or accessed?Permissions and associated risk levels are now surfaced earlier in the agent lifecycle and made actionable from the MAC interface, which changes how consent and access to customer data are managed.
Does the change introduce or significantly modify AI/ML or agent capabilities that interact with or provide access to customer data?The AI Admin Role can now deploy agents once consent is granted, introducing new agent deployment capabilities tied to customer data access.
Does the change include an admin control and, can it be controlled through Entra ID group membership?Admins can grant consent directly from the Permissions Tab, and deployment is gated by Global Admin consent, which can be managed via Entra ID roles.

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