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(Updated) Microsoft Teams: Meeting Participants Can Request Collaborative Annotation Sessions

Message ID
MC1019312
View in Message Center
Service
Microsoft Teams
Category
Stay Informed
Tags
New featureUser impact
Rollout
April 2026May 2026
Roadmap ID
89975
View in M365 Roadmap
Platforms
DesktopMac

Summary

Microsoft Teams now allows meeting participants on Windows and macOS apps to request collaborative annotation during screen sharing, subject to presenter approval. Organizers can control who can start annotations via a new meeting option. Rollout begins May 2026, with no admin action required.

Details

Updated May 13, 2026: We have updated the content. Thank you for your patience.

Applies to: Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop 

[Introduction:]

All meeting participants joining from native apps on Windows and macOS will be able to request to start collaborative annotations when a screen or window is being shared. The annotations start only after the active sharer approves the request. This capability is available exclusively in the new Microsoft Teams experience on native Windows and macOS apps.

This release also introduces a meeting option in the Participation section, allowing organizers and co-organizers to choose who can start annotations. By default, "Everyone" can access the "Start Annotation" button, but organizers and co-organizers can limit it to just the "Active Sharer", making the button visible only to the person currently sharing their screen or window.

Note: Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations. Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early May 2026 (previously mid-April) and expect to complete by mid-May 2026 (previously late April).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-May 2026 (previously late March) and expect to complete by late May 2026 (previously late April).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen, who can choose to accept or deny it.

Meeting Organizer Settings (Meeting Options)

A new "Who can start annotations?" option appears under the Participation section in Meeting Options. Organizers and co-organizers can select:

  • Everyone (default) — All participants see the "Start Annotation" button
  • Active Sharer — Only the person currently sharing sees the annotation button

After rollout, the default value of Everyone will apply to all meetings. Organizers and co-organizers can manually update this option to Active Sharer in case they want to opt out of this feature. 

user controls

user controls

Participant Annotation Request Flow 

When a participant who is not the active sharer wants to annotate, they click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar. A confirmation dialog appears, and once the participant clicks "Request", a notification is sent to the presenter for approval.

  1. Click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar to initiate an annotation request.
  2. user controls

  3. Confirm the request in the dialog box. Once approved, annotations start request will be sent to active sharer
  4. user controls

  5. Request sent notification confirms the request is pending and the presenter needs to approve it. 
  6. user controls

Presenter Approval Experience

The active sharer (presenter) receives a notification at the top of their screen indicating that a viewer wants to start annotations. The presenter can choose to Deny or Allow the request.

user controls

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to:

  • Notify your users about this change and how the annotation request/approval flow works 
  • Update relevant documentation to reflect the new meeting option and participant behavior 
  • Educate meeting organizers on the new "Who can start annotations?" meeting option under Participation 
  • Communicate to end users that they can now request to start annotations during screen sharing sessions 

This change will be available by default. 

Additional Resources: 

Change History

Show
May 13, 2026 at 6:30 PM Updated
Summary
Previous
Microsoft Teams will allow meeting participants on Windows and macOS apps to request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing, subject to the presenter's approval. Organizers can control who can start annotations via a new meeting option. Rollout begins May 2026 with no admin action required.
New
Microsoft Teams now allows meeting participants on Windows and macOS apps to request collaborative annotation during screen sharing, subject to presenter approval. Organizers can control who can start annotations via a new meeting option. Rollout begins May 2026, with no admin action required.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2026-04-29T16:47:32.993Z
New
2026-05-13T16:22:01.040Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated April 23, 2026: We have updated the timeline and content. Thank you for your patience.

Applies to: Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop 

[Introduction:]

All meeting participants joining from native apps on Windows and macOS will be able to request to start collaborative annotations when a screen or window is being shared. The annotations start only after the active sharer approves the request. This capability is available exclusively in the new Microsoft Teams experience on native Windows and macOS apps.

This release also introduces a meeting option in the Participation section, allowing organizers and co-organizers to choose who can start annotations. By default, "Everyone" can access the "Start Annotation" button, but organizers and co-organizers can limit it to just the "Active Sharer", making the button visible only to the person currently sharing their screen or window.

Note: Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations. Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early May 2026 (previously mid-April) and expect to complete by mid-May 2026 (previously late April).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-May 2026 (previously late March) and expect to complete by late May 2026 (previously late April).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen, who can choose to accept or deny it.

Meeting Organizer Settings (Meeting Options)

A new "Who can start annotations?" option appears under the Participation section in Meeting Options. Organizers and co-organizers can select:

  • Everyone (default) — All participants see the "Start Annotation" button
  • Active Sharer — Only the person currently sharing sees the annotation button

After rollout, the default value of Everyone will apply to all newly created meetings. For meetings created before rollout, the setting will be Active Sharer to match the current behavior where only the active sharer can start annotations. Organizers and co-organizers must manually update existing meetings if they want to enable the new behavior for those meetings. 

user controls

user controls

Participant Annotation Request Flow 

When a participant who is not the active sharer wants to annotate, they click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar. A confirmation dialog appears, and once the participant clicks "Request", a notification is sent to the presenter for approval.

  1. Click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar to initiate an annotation request.
  2. user controls

  3. Confirm the request in the dialog box. Once approved, annotations start request will be sent to active sharer
  4. user controls

  5. Request sent notification confirms the request is pending and the presenter needs to approve it. 
  6. user controls

Presenter Approval Experience

The active sharer (presenter) receives a notification at the top of their screen indicating that a viewer wants to start annotations. The presenter can choose to Deny or Allow the request.

user controls

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to:

  • Notify your users about this change and how the annotation request/approval flow works 
  • Update relevant documentation to reflect the new meeting option and participant behavior 
  • Educate meeting organizers on the new "Who can start annotations?" meeting option under Participation 
  • Communicate to end users that they can now request to start annotations during screen sharing sessions 

This change will be available by default. 

Additional Resources: 

New

Updated May 13, 2026: We have updated the content. Thank you for your patience.

Applies to: Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop 

[Introduction:]

All meeting participants joining from native apps on Windows and macOS will be able to request to start collaborative annotations when a screen or window is being shared. The annotations start only after the active sharer approves the request. This capability is available exclusively in the new Microsoft Teams experience on native Windows and macOS apps.

This release also introduces a meeting option in the Participation section, allowing organizers and co-organizers to choose who can start annotations. By default, "Everyone" can access the "Start Annotation" button, but organizers and co-organizers can limit it to just the "Active Sharer", making the button visible only to the person currently sharing their screen or window.

Note: Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations. Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early May 2026 (previously mid-April) and expect to complete by mid-May 2026 (previously late April).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-May 2026 (previously late March) and expect to complete by late May 2026 (previously late April).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen, who can choose to accept or deny it.

Meeting Organizer Settings (Meeting Options)

A new "Who can start annotations?" option appears under the Participation section in Meeting Options. Organizers and co-organizers can select:

  • Everyone (default) — All participants see the "Start Annotation" button
  • Active Sharer — Only the person currently sharing sees the annotation button

After rollout, the default value of Everyone will apply to all meetings. Organizers and co-organizers can manually update this option to Active Sharer in case they want to opt out of this feature. 

user controls

user controls

Participant Annotation Request Flow 

When a participant who is not the active sharer wants to annotate, they click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar. A confirmation dialog appears, and once the participant clicks "Request", a notification is sent to the presenter for approval.

  1. Click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar to initiate an annotation request.
  2. user controls

  3. Confirm the request in the dialog box. Once approved, annotations start request will be sent to active sharer
  4. user controls

  5. Request sent notification confirms the request is pending and the presenter needs to approve it. 
  6. user controls

Presenter Approval Experience

The active sharer (presenter) receives a notification at the top of their screen indicating that a viewer wants to start annotations. The presenter can choose to Deny or Allow the request.

user controls

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to:

  • Notify your users about this change and how the annotation request/approval flow works 
  • Update relevant documentation to reflect the new meeting option and participant behavior 
  • Educate meeting organizers on the new "Who can start annotations?" meeting option under Participation 
  • Communicate to end users that they can now request to start annotations during screen sharing sessions 

This change will be available by default. 

Additional Resources: 

April 29, 2026 at 8:30 PM Updated
Title
Previous
Microsoft Teams: Meeting Participants Can Request Collaborative Annotation Sessions Dependent on Host Permission
New
(Updated) Microsoft Teams: Meeting Participants Can Request Collaborative Annotation Sessions
Last Updated Date
Previous
2026-04-24T16:08:56.877Z
New
2026-04-29T16:47:32.993Z
April 24, 2026 at 4:30 PM Updated
Last Updated Date
Previous
2026-04-23T18:12:17.283Z
New
2026-04-24T16:08:56.877Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated April 23, 2026: We have updated the timeline and content. Thank you for your patience.

Applies to: Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop 

[Introduction:]

All meeting participants joining from native apps on Windows and macOS will be able to request to start collaborative annotations when a screen or window is being shared. The annotations start only after the active sharer approves the request. This capability is available exclusively in the new Microsoft Teams experience on native Windows and macOS apps.

This release also introduces a meeting option in the Participation section, allowing organizers and co-organizers to choose who can start annotations. By default, "Everyone" can access the "Start Annotation" button, but organizers and co-organizers can limit it to just the "Active Sharer", making the button visible only to the person currently sharing their screen or window.

Note: Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations. Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early May 2026 (previously mid-April) and expect to complete by mid-May 2026 (previously late April).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-May 2026 (previously late March) and expect to complete by late May 2026 (previously late April).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen, who can choose to accept or deny it.

Meeting Organizer Settings (Meeting Options)

A new "Who can start annotations?" option appears under the Participation section in Meeting Options. Organizers and co-organizers can select

  • Everyone (default) — All participants see the "Start Annotation" button
  • Active Sharer — Only the person currently sharing sees the annotation button 

user controls

user controls

Participant Annotation Request Flow 

When a participant who is not the active sharer wants to annotate, they click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar. A confirmation dialog appears, and once the participant clicks "Request", a notification is sent to the presenter for approval.

  1. Click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar to initiate an annotation request.
  2. user controls

  3. Confirm the request in the dialog box. Once approved, annotations start request will be sent to active sharer
  4. user controls

  5. Request sent notification confirms the request is pending and the presenter needs to approve it. 
  6. user controls

Presenter Approval Experience

The active sharer (presenter) receives a notification at the top of their screen indicating that a viewer wants to start annotations. The presenter can choose to Deny or Allow the request.

user controls

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to:

  • Notify your users about this change and how the annotation request/approval flow works 
  • Update relevant documentation to reflect the new meeting option and participant behavior 
  • Educate meeting organizers on the new "Who can start annotations?" meeting option under Participation 
  • Communicate to end users that they can now request to start annotations during screen sharing sessions 

This change will be available by default. 

Additional Resources: 

New

Updated April 23, 2026: We have updated the timeline and content. Thank you for your patience.

Applies to: Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop 

[Introduction:]

All meeting participants joining from native apps on Windows and macOS will be able to request to start collaborative annotations when a screen or window is being shared. The annotations start only after the active sharer approves the request. This capability is available exclusively in the new Microsoft Teams experience on native Windows and macOS apps.

This release also introduces a meeting option in the Participation section, allowing organizers and co-organizers to choose who can start annotations. By default, "Everyone" can access the "Start Annotation" button, but organizers and co-organizers can limit it to just the "Active Sharer", making the button visible only to the person currently sharing their screen or window.

Note: Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations. Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early May 2026 (previously mid-April) and expect to complete by mid-May 2026 (previously late April).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-May 2026 (previously late March) and expect to complete by late May 2026 (previously late April).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen, who can choose to accept or deny it.

Meeting Organizer Settings (Meeting Options)

A new "Who can start annotations?" option appears under the Participation section in Meeting Options. Organizers and co-organizers can select:

  • Everyone (default) — All participants see the "Start Annotation" button
  • Active Sharer — Only the person currently sharing sees the annotation button

After rollout, the default value of Everyone will apply to all newly created meetings. For meetings created before rollout, the setting will be Active Sharer to match the current behavior where only the active sharer can start annotations. Organizers and co-organizers must manually update existing meetings if they want to enable the new behavior for those meetings. 

user controls

user controls

Participant Annotation Request Flow 

When a participant who is not the active sharer wants to annotate, they click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar. A confirmation dialog appears, and once the participant clicks "Request", a notification is sent to the presenter for approval.

  1. Click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar to initiate an annotation request.
  2. user controls

  3. Confirm the request in the dialog box. Once approved, annotations start request will be sent to active sharer
  4. user controls

  5. Request sent notification confirms the request is pending and the presenter needs to approve it. 
  6. user controls

Presenter Approval Experience

The active sharer (presenter) receives a notification at the top of their screen indicating that a viewer wants to start annotations. The presenter can choose to Deny or Allow the request.

user controls

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to:

  • Notify your users about this change and how the annotation request/approval flow works 
  • Update relevant documentation to reflect the new meeting option and participant behavior 
  • Educate meeting organizers on the new "Who can start annotations?" meeting option under Participation 
  • Communicate to end users that they can now request to start annotations during screen sharing sessions 

This change will be available by default. 

Additional Resources: 

April 23, 2026 at 8:31 PM Updated
Title
Previous
(Updated) Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants can request collaborative annotation sessions
New
Microsoft Teams: Meeting Participants Can Request Collaborative Annotation Sessions Dependent on Host Permission
Summary
Previous
Starting May 2026, Microsoft Teams desktop users can request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing. Presenters can accept or deny requests, enabling everyone in the meeting to annotate. Anonymous users cannot request annotations. The feature rolls out automatically with no admin action needed.
New
Microsoft Teams will allow meeting participants on Windows and macOS apps to request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing, subject to the presenter's approval. Organizers can control who can start annotations via a new meeting option. Rollout begins May 2026 with no admin action required.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2026-03-16T16:15:23.267Z
New
2026-04-23T18:12:17.283Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated March 16, 2026: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early May 2026 (previously mid-April) and expect to complete by mid-May 2026 (previously late April).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-May 2026 (previously late March) and expect to complete by late May 2026 (previously late April).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

New

Updated April 23, 2026: We have updated the timeline and content. Thank you for your patience.

Applies to: Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop 

[Introduction:]

All meeting participants joining from native apps on Windows and macOS will be able to request to start collaborative annotations when a screen or window is being shared. The annotations start only after the active sharer approves the request. This capability is available exclusively in the new Microsoft Teams experience on native Windows and macOS apps.

This release also introduces a meeting option in the Participation section, allowing organizers and co-organizers to choose who can start annotations. By default, "Everyone" can access the "Start Annotation" button, but organizers and co-organizers can limit it to just the "Active Sharer", making the button visible only to the person currently sharing their screen or window.

Note: Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations. Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early May 2026 (previously mid-April) and expect to complete by mid-May 2026 (previously late April).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-May 2026 (previously late March) and expect to complete by late May 2026 (previously late April).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen, who can choose to accept or deny it.

Meeting Organizer Settings (Meeting Options)

A new "Who can start annotations?" option appears under the Participation section in Meeting Options. Organizers and co-organizers can select

  • Everyone (default) — All participants see the "Start Annotation" button
  • Active Sharer — Only the person currently sharing sees the annotation button 

user controls

user controls

Participant Annotation Request Flow 

When a participant who is not the active sharer wants to annotate, they click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar. A confirmation dialog appears, and once the participant clicks "Request", a notification is sent to the presenter for approval.

  1. Click the "Start annotation" button in the meeting toolbar to initiate an annotation request.
  2. user controls

  3. Confirm the request in the dialog box. Once approved, annotations start request will be sent to active sharer
  4. user controls

  5. Request sent notification confirms the request is pending and the presenter needs to approve it. 
  6. user controls

Presenter Approval Experience

The active sharer (presenter) receives a notification at the top of their screen indicating that a viewer wants to start annotations. The presenter can choose to Deny or Allow the request.

user controls

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to:

  • Notify your users about this change and how the annotation request/approval flow works 
  • Update relevant documentation to reflect the new meeting option and participant behavior 
  • Educate meeting organizers on the new "Who can start annotations?" meeting option under Participation 
  • Communicate to end users that they can now request to start annotations during screen sharing sessions 

This change will be available by default. 

Additional Resources: 

March 16, 2026 at 4:30 PM Updated
Summary
Previous
Microsoft Teams will soon allow meeting participants to request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing on Windows and Mac desktops. Rollout begins mid-April 2026 for targeted release and mid-May 2026 for general availability. Presenters can accept or deny annotation requests; anonymous users cannot request. No admin action needed.
New
Starting May 2026, Microsoft Teams desktop users can request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing. Presenters can accept or deny requests, enabling everyone in the meeting to annotate. Anonymous users cannot request annotations. The feature rolls out automatically with no admin action needed.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2026-02-24T21:24:56.697Z
New
2026-03-16T16:15:23.267Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated February 24, 2026: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out mid-April 2026 (previously early March) and expect to complete by late April 2026 (previously late March).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-May 2026 (previously late March) and expect to complete by late May 2026 (previously late April).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

New

Updated March 16, 2026: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early May 2026 (previously mid-April) and expect to complete by mid-May 2026 (previously late April).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-May 2026 (previously late March) and expect to complete by late May 2026 (previously late April).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

February 24, 2026 at 10:31 PM Updated
Summary
Previous
Starting March 2026, Microsoft Teams desktop users can request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing. Presenters can accept or deny these requests. Anonymous users cannot request annotations. The feature rolls out automatically with no admin action needed; users should be notified and documentation updated accordingly.
New
Microsoft Teams will soon allow meeting participants to request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing on Windows and Mac desktops. Rollout begins mid-April 2026 for targeted release and mid-May 2026 for general availability. Presenters can accept or deny annotation requests; anonymous users cannot request. No admin action needed.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2026-01-27T17:13:37.953Z
New
2026-02-24T21:24:56.697Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated January 27, 2026: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early March 2026 (previously early February) and expect to complete by late March 2026 (previously mid-February).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out late March 2026 (previously mid-February) and expect to complete by late April 2026 (previously late February).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

New

Updated February 24, 2026: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out mid-April 2026 (previously early March) and expect to complete by late April 2026 (previously late March).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-May 2026 (previously late March) and expect to complete by late May 2026 (previously late April).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

January 27, 2026 at 6:30 PM Updated
Summary
Previous
Microsoft Teams will soon allow meeting participants to request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing on Windows and Mac desktops. Rollout begins February 2026, with presenters able to accept or deny requests. Anonymous users cannot request. No admin action needed; users should be notified.
New
Starting March 2026, Microsoft Teams desktop users can request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing. Presenters can accept or deny these requests. Anonymous users cannot request annotations. The feature rolls out automatically with no admin action needed; users should be notified and documentation updated accordingly.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-12-08T17:42:34.433Z
New
2026-01-27T17:13:37.953Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated December 8, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early February 2026 (previously early January) and expect to complete by mid-February 2026 (previously mid-January).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-February 2026 (previously mid-January) and expect to complete by late February 2026 (previously late January).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

New

Updated January 27, 2026: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early March 2026 (previously early February) and expect to complete by late March 2026 (previously mid-February).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out late March 2026 (previously mid-February) and expect to complete by late April 2026 (previously late February).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

December 8, 2025 at 6:31 PM Updated
Summary
Previous
Starting early January 2026, Microsoft Teams will let meeting participants request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing. Presenters can accept or deny requests. This applies to Teams desktop apps; web users can view and annotate but not initiate. Rollout requires no admin action.
New
Microsoft Teams will soon allow meeting participants to request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing on Windows and Mac desktops. Rollout begins February 2026, with presenters able to accept or deny requests. Anonymous users cannot request. No admin action needed; users should be notified.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-11-18T17:55:12.920Z
New
2025-12-08T17:42:34.433Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated November 18, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early January 2026 (previously early December 2025) and expect to complete by mid-January 2026 (previously mid-December 2025).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-January 2026 (previously mid-December 2025) and expect to complete by late January 2026 (previously late December 2025).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

New

Updated December 8, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early February 2026 (previously early January) and expect to complete by mid-February 2026 (previously mid-January).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-February 2026 (previously mid-January) and expect to complete by late February 2026 (previously late January).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

November 18, 2025 at 6:31 PM Updated
Summary
Previous
Starting December 2025, Microsoft Teams desktop users can request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing. Presenters can accept or deny requests, enabling all participants to annotate. Anonymous users cannot request. The feature rolls out automatically with no admin action needed.
New
Starting early January 2026, Microsoft Teams will let meeting participants request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing. Presenters can accept or deny requests. This applies to Teams desktop apps; web users can view and annotate but not initiate. Rollout requires no admin action.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-09-24T19:22:35.297Z
New
2025-11-18T17:55:12.920Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated September 24, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early December 2025 and expect to complete by mid-December 2025.

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-December 2025 and expect to complete by late December 2025.

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

New

Updated November 18, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early January 2026 (previously early December 2025) and expect to complete by mid-January 2026 (previously mid-December 2025).

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-January 2026 (previously mid-December 2025) and expect to complete by late January 2026 (previously late December 2025).

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

September 24, 2025 at 8:30 PM Updated
Summary
Previous
Starting October 2025, Microsoft Teams desktop users can request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing. Presenters can accept or deny requests, enabling everyone in the meeting to annotate. Anonymous users cannot request. The feature rolls out automatically with no admin action needed.
New
Starting December 2025, Microsoft Teams desktop users can request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing. Presenters can accept or deny requests, enabling all participants to annotate. Anonymous users cannot request. The feature rolls out automatically with no admin action needed.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-08-27T13:29:29.103Z
New
2025-09-24T19:22:35.297Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated August 27, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience.

Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early October 2025 and expect to complete by mid-October 2025.

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-October 2025 and expect to complete by late October 2025

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

New

Updated September 24, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience. 

 Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early December 2025 and expect to complete by mid-December 2025.

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-December 2025 and expect to complete by late December 2025.

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

August 27, 2025 at 2:30 PM Updated
Summary
Previous
Meeting participants in Microsoft Teams will soon be able to request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing. This feature will roll out in September 2025 for Windows and Mac desktops. Anonymous users cannot request annotations. No admin action is required, but user notification is recommended.
New
Starting October 2025, Microsoft Teams desktop users can request collaborative annotation sessions during screen sharing. Presenters can accept or deny requests, enabling everyone in the meeting to annotate. Anonymous users cannot request. The feature rolls out automatically with no admin action needed.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-07-18T14:22:26.627Z
New
2025-08-27T13:29:29.103Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated July 18, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience.

Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early September 2025 and expect to complete by mid-September 2025.

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-September 2025 and expect to complete by late September 2025.

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

New

Updated August 27, 2025: We have updated the timeline. Thank you for your patience.

Coming soon for Microsoft Teams: Meeting participants will be able to request an annotation session while someone else is sharing their screen.

This message applies to Teams for Windows desktop and Teams for Mac desktop. (Users can view and annotate in Teams on the web but cannot initiate annotations.)

This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 89975.

[When this will happen:]

Targeted Release: We will begin rolling out early October 2025 and expect to complete by mid-October 2025.

General Availability (WW, GCC, GCC High, and DoD): We will begin rolling out mid-October 2025 and expect to complete by late October 2025

[How this will affect your organization:]

After the rollout, meeting participants who are not sharing their screens will have the ability to request an annotation session. This request will be sent to the presenter sharing their screen who can choose to accept or deny it:

user controls

If the request is accepted, the annotation session will start for everyone in the meeting:

user controls

Anonymous users in the meeting will not be able to send a request.

This change will be available by default.

[What you need to do to prepare:]

This rollout will happen automatically by the specified dates with no admin action required before the rollout. You may want to notify your users about this change and update any relevant documentation as appropriate.

Learn more: Use annotation while sharing your screen in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support (we will update this before rollout)

Watch: How to use Collaborative Annotations in a Microsoft Teams meeting (2022)

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