When generative AI tools guess what you need, the magic only lasts as long as the guesses are right. Add an unfamiliar codebase, a security checklist your team keeps in a wiki, or a one‑off Slack thread that explains why something matters, and even the most and even the most powerful model may fill in gaps with assumptions rather than having access to your specific context and knowledge.
GitHub Copilot Spaces fixes that problem by letting you bundle the exact context Copilot should read—code, docs, transcripts, sample queries, you name it—into a reusable “space.” Once a space is created, every Copilot chat, completion, or command is grounded in that curated knowledge, producing answers that feel like they came from your organization’s resident expert instead of a generic model.
In this article, we’ll walk through:
A 5‑minute quick‑start guide to creating your first space
Tips for personalizing Copilot’s tone, style, and conventions with custom instructions
Real‑world recipes for accessibility, data queries, and onboarding
Collaboration, security, and what’s next on the roadmap (spoiler: IDE integration and Issues/PR support)
Why context is the new bottleneck for AI‑assisted development
Large language models (LLMs) thrive on patterns, but day‑to‑day engineering work is full of unpatterned edge cases, including:
A monorepo that mixes modern React with legacy jQuery
Organizational wisdom buried in Slack threads or internal wikis
Organization‑specific security guidelines that differ from upstream OSS docs
Without that context, an AI assistant can only guess. But with Copilot Spaces, you choose which files, documents, or free‑text snippets matter, drop them into a space, and let Copilot use that context to answer questions or write code. As Kelly Henckel, PM for GitHub Spaces, said in our GitHub Checkout episode, “Spaces make it easy to organize and share context, so Copilot acts like a subject matter expert.” The result? Fewer wrong guesses, less copy-pasting, and code that’s commit-ready.
What exactly is a Copilot Space?
Think of a space as a secure, shareable container of knowledge plus behavioral instructions:
What it holds
Why it matters
Attachments
Code files, entire folders, Markdown docs, transcripts, or any plain text you add
Gives Copilot the ground truth for answers
Custom instructions
Short system prompts to set tone, coding style, or reviewer expectations
Lets Copilot match your house rules
Sharing & permissions
Follows the same role/visibility model you already use on GitHub
No new access control lists to manage
Live updates
Files stay in sync with the branch you referenced
Your space stays up to date with your codebase
Spaces are available to anyone with a Copilot license (Free, Individual, Business, or Enterprise) while the feature is in public preview. Admins can enable it under Settings > Copilot > Preview features.
TL;DR: A space is like pinning your team’s collective brain to the Copilot sidebar and letting everyone query it in plain language.
Quick-start guide: How to build your first space in 5 minutes
Name it clearly. For example, frontend‑styleguide.
Add a description so teammates know when—and when not—to use it.
Attach context:
From repos: Pull in folders like src/components or individual files such as eslint.config.js.
Free‑text hack: Paste a Slack thread, video transcript, onboarding checklist, or even a JSON schema into the Text tab. Copilot treats it like any other attachment.
Write custom instructions. A sentence or two is enough:
“Respond as a senior React reviewer. Enforce our ESLint rules and tailwind class naming conventions.”
Save and test it. You’re done. Ask Copilot a question in the Space chat—e.g., “Refactor this <Button> component to match our accessibility checklist”—and watch it cite files you just attached.
Custom instructions are the “personality layer” of a space and where spaces shine because they live alongside the attachments. This allows you to do powerful things with a single sentence, including:
Enforce conventions
“Always prefer Vue 3 script setup syntax and Composition API for examples.”
Adopt a team tone
“Answer concisely. Include a one‑line summary before code blocks.”
Teach Copilot project‑specific vocabulary
“Call it ‘scenario ID’ (SCID), not test case ID.”
During the GitHub Checkout interview, Kelly shared how she built a personal space for a nonprofit side project: She attached only the Vue front‑end folder plus instructions on her preferred conventions, and Copilot delivered commit‑ready code snippets that matched her style guide on the first try.
Automate your workflow: three real‑world recipes
1. Accessibility compliance assistant
Space ingredients
Markdown docs on WCAG criteria and GitHub’s internal “Definition of Done”
Custom instruction: “When answering, cite the doc section and provide a code diff if changes are required.”
How it helps: Instead of pinging the accessibility lead on Slack, you can use Spaces to ask questions like “What steps are needed for MAS‑C compliance on this new modal?” Copilot summarizes the relevant checkpoints, references the doc anchor, and even suggests ARIA attributes or color‑contrast fixes. GitHub’s own accessibility SME, Katherine, pinned this space in Slack so anyone filing a review gets instant, self‑service guidance.
2. Data‑query helper for complex schemas
Space ingredients
YAML schema files for 40+ event tables
Example KQL snippets saved as .sql files
Instruction: “Generate KQL only, no prose explanations unless asked.”
How it helps: Product managers and support engineers who don’t know your database structures can ask, “Average PR review time last 7 days?” Copilot autocompletes a valid KQL query with correct joins and lets them iterate. Result: lets PMs and support self-serve without bugging data science teams.
3. Onboarding Hub and knowledge base in one link
Space ingredients
Key architecture diagrams exported as SVG text
ADRs and design docs from multiple repos
Custom instruction: “Answer like a mentor during onboarding; link to deeper docs.”
How it helps: New hires type “How does our auth flow handle SAML?” and get a structured answer with links and diagrams, all without leaving GitHub. Because spaces stay in sync with main, updates to ADRs propagate automatically—no stale wikis.
Collaboration that feels native to GitHub
Spaces respect the same permission model you already use:
Personal spaces: visible only to you unless shared
Organization‑owned spaces: use repo or team permissions to gate access
Read‑only vs. edit‑capable: let SMEs maintain the canon while everyone else consumes
Sharing is as simple as sending the space URL or pinning it to a repo README. Anyone with access and a Copilot license can start chatting instantly.
What’s next for Copilot Spaces?
We’re working to bring Copilot Spaces to more of your workflows, and are currently developing:
Issues and PR attachments to bring inline discussions and review notes into the same context bundle.
IDE Integration: Query Spaces in VS Code for tasks like writing tests to match your team’s patterns.
Org‑wide discoverability to help you browse spaces like you browse repos today, so new engineers can search “Payments SME” and start chatting.
Head to github.com/copilot/spaces, spin up your first space, and let us know how it streamlines your workflow. Here’s how to get it fully set up on your end:
Flip the preview toggle: Settings > Copilot > Preview features > Enable Copilot Spaces.
Create one small, high‑impact space—maybe your team’s code‑review checklist or a set of common data queries.
Share the link in Slack or a README and watch the pings to subject‑matter experts drop.
Iterate: prune unused attachments, refine instructions, or split a giant space into smaller ones.
Copilot Spaces is free during the public preview and doesn’t count against your Copilot seat entitlements when you use the base model. We can’t wait to see what you build when Copilot has the right context at its fingertips.
Andrea is a Senior Developer Advocate at GitHub with over a decade of experience in developer tools. She combines technical depth with a mission to make advanced technologies more accessible. After transitioning from Army service and construction management to software development, she brings a unique perspective to bridging complex engineering concepts with practical implementation. She lives in Florida with her Welsh partner, two sons, and two dogs, where she continues to drive innovation and support open source through GitHub's global initiatives. Find her online @alacolombiadev.