LIVE FEED — JUN 12, 2026
Uncategorized

AI Now Writes Nearly Half Your Developer’s Code — and They’re Faster for It

GitHub Copilot now has ~20 million users and writes about 46% of code for those who use it, with developers finishing tasks 55% faster — though trust gaps and bad suggestions remain.

By · June 10, 2026 · 2 min read
AI Now Writes Nearly Half Your Developer's Code — and They're Faster for It

Software is increasingly being written with a co-pilot in the seat. AI coding assistants have gone mainstream among developers, and the 2026 data shows just how deeply they have woven themselves into how code gets made.

The adoption

GitHub Copilot, the category leader, reached roughly 20 million total users by mid-2025 and 4.7 million paid subscribers by January 2026 — up 75% year over year — holding about 42% of a $7.37 billion AI coding-tools market. For a developer tool, that is extraordinarily fast penetration, and it reflects how quickly writing code with AI went from novelty to default workflow.

The productivity gains

The payoff is measurable. GitHub’s research found developers complete tasks 55% faster with Copilot, and active users report up to 81% productivity improvement; developers using it were 78% more likely to finish tasks successfully. On average, Copilot now generates about 46% of the code written by its users — and 61% for Java developers. Nearly half the code, drafted by the machine.

The happiness factor

It is not just speed. In developer-experience surveys, 95% of users say they enjoy coding more when using Copilot — offloading boilerplate and tedious lookups so engineers can focus on the interesting problems. For a profession prone to burnout, that satisfaction bump matters as much as the raw output gains.

The trust gap

The caveats are real and widely felt. About 46% of developers say they do not fully trust AI outputs, and the top complaints are telling: inaccurate code suggestions (66%), longer debugging times (45%), and poor suitability for critical work like deployment and project planning. AI is excellent at drafting; it is far less reliable for the judgment-heavy, high-stakes parts of engineering — which still require an experienced human.

Why it matters

If AI writes half the code, the developer’s job shifts from writing to reviewing, directing and verifying. That raises the premium on the skills AI lacks — architecture, debugging, judgment — and changes how teams train juniors who once learned by writing the boilerplate AI now handles. Productivity rises, but so does the importance of oversight.

The bottom line

AI coding assistants are one of the technology’s most concrete wins: faster work, happier developers, and nearly half the code generated automatically. But the trust gap is the asterisk — the tools accelerate the easy parts while leaving the hard, consequential decisions firmly with humans. Used that way, they are a genuine force multiplier.

Photo: Homedust / BY via flickr