Microsoft AI boss Mustafa Suleyman recently dropped a bombshell statement that's sending shockwaves through the corporate world: AI could replace most white-collar jobs within the next 12 to 18 months. Yes, you read that right—not in 10 years, not even in 5, but potentially as soon as late 2027.
In an exclusive interview with the Financial Times (published around February 12, 2026), Mustafa Suleyman, the CEO of Microsoft AI (and former co-founder of DeepMind and Inflection AI), painted a picture of rapid, game-changing automation. He specifically called out roles that involve sitting in front of a computer all day—lawyers, accountants, project managers, marketers, and similar knowledge workers—as prime targets for full AI takeover.His exact words?
“White-collar jobs – those sitting in front of computers, whether lawyers, accountants, project managers, or marketers – most of these tasks will be fully automated by AI within the next 12 to 18 months.”
He even went further, describing the upcoming wave as “professional-grade AGI” — AI systems capable of performing almost any task a human professional does today, reaching human-level performance in most professional activities.Why Is This Prediction So Bold—and Why Now?Suleyman isn't just speculating from the sidelines. As Microsoft's top AI executive, he has a front-row seat to the latest model advancements. Microsoft is aggressively pushing its own in-house AI models (reducing heavy reliance on partners like OpenAI) and aiming for true AI self-sufficiency. He also mentioned that building a custom AI model in the near future will be as easy as recording a podcast or writing a blog post—tailored for every company or individual.Other hints from the interview:- AI agents will handle entire institutional workflows much more efficiently in just 2-3 years.
- Current models are already coding better than many humans in certain areas.
- AI trainers and prompt engineers
- Ethics and governance specialists
- Humans who oversee, fine-tune, or creatively direct AI systems
- Entirely new roles we can't even imagine yet

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