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MCP Documentation

(Updated) Upcoming Change to Teams Desktop Client on Windows

Message ID
MC1189656
View in Message Center
Service
Microsoft Teams
Category
Plan for Change
Tags
Feature updateUser impactAdmin impact
Rollout
January 2026

Summary

The planned renaming of the Teams Calling and Meetings executable was canceled due to a Windows fix in versions 24H2 and 25H2. No admin action is needed. A new process, ms-teams_modulehost.exe, will be introduced for calling features to improve performance, requiring endpoint allowlisting and QoS updates.

Details

Updated January 15, 2026: We are canceling a proposed change related to renaming the existing Calling and Meetings executable.

No action is required from administrators. This change did not introduce a new binary. It involved renaming the existing executable used for Calling and Meetings as a workaround for a Windows compatibility issue. 

What Happened? 

To reduce administrative effort, we partnered with the Windows team to deliver the fix for a Windows compatibility issue. With the Windows fix now fully rolled out in Windows 24H2 and 25H2, the executable name change is no longer required and has been rolled back. 

Was this a security, reliability, or compliance issue? 

  • This was not a security or compliance issue. 
  • It was a platform compatibility issue in Windows. 
  • No customer data, identity, or tenant configuration was at risk. 

Was my tenant impacted? 

Only organizations participating in our Technology Adoption Program (TAP) were affected. Specifically, the change applied only to the TAP Admin earlyadopter subset (Ring 1.5). 

If your organization does not participate in the Microsoft Technology Adoption Program, you were not impacted in any way. The change has been fully rolled back for TAP participants, with no lasting configuration or behavioral changes on client machines. No administrator action is required. 

What if we haven’t deployed recent Windows updates yet? 

We understand that many enterprises deploy Windows cumulative updates on managed timelines. 

  • There is no risk or degradation if the referenced Windows KBs are not installed. 
  • New features that depend on these Windows updates will explicitly check for the presence of the required KBs and will only enable when they are available. 
  • If the KBs are not installed, those features simply remain disabled—no functionality breaks and no admin action is required

Windows updates that include the fix 

The Windows compatibility fix is included in Windows updates for versions 24H2 and 25H2, delivered through KB5068861

What to expect next? 

  • No changes to admin configuration or tenant settings 
  • No service disruption 

---Original message---

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Rollout will begin early January 2026 and complete by late January 2026.

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
  • Make sure the same QoS settings applied to ms-teams.exe are also applied to ms-teams_modulehost.exe. Refer to this page for details: Implement Quality of Service (QoS) in Microsoft Teams
    • DO NOT remove QoS settings of ms-teams.exe. Only add QoS settings for ms-teams_modulehost.exe.
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

Change History

Show
January 15, 2026 at 6:30 PM Updated
Summary
Previous
Thank you for the valuable feedback we’ve received. We are currently reassessing the rollout timelines to ensure alignment with your needs and operational requirements. You can expect a formal update from us by mid to late January 2026.
New
The planned renaming of the Teams Calling and Meetings executable was canceled due to a Windows fix in versions 24H2 and 25H2. No admin action is needed. A new process, ms-teams_modulehost.exe, will be introduced for calling features to improve performance, requiring endpoint allowlisting and QoS updates.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-12-17T18:18:50.843Z
New
2026-01-15T16:17:06.323Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated December 17, 2025: We understand that implementing the current guidance involves considerable effort for administrators, and we are actively working to reduce this impact. We are exploring ways to make policy changes as seamless as possible, in close partnership with the Windows team.

Given this ongoing work, we recommend pausing any testing or configuration updates related to this feature. Updated instructions and revised guidance will be shared as part of the formal communication planned for January 2026.

Thank you for the valuable feedback we’ve received. We are currently reassessing the rollout timelines to ensure alignment with your needs and operational requirements. You can expect a formal update from us by mid to late January 2026.

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Updated rollout timing will be announced in January 2026

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
  • Make sure the same QoS settings applied to ms-teams.exe are also applied to ms-teams_modulehost.exe. Refer to this page for details: Implement Quality of Service (QoS) in Microsoft Teams
    • DO NOT remove QoS settings of ms-teams.exe. Only add QoS settings for ms-teams_modulehost.exe.
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

New

Updated January 15, 2026: We are canceling a proposed change related to renaming the existing Calling and Meetings executable.

No action is required from administrators. This change did not introduce a new binary. It involved renaming the existing executable used for Calling and Meetings as a workaround for a Windows compatibility issue. 

What Happened? 

To reduce administrative effort, we partnered with the Windows team to deliver the fix for a Windows compatibility issue. With the Windows fix now fully rolled out in Windows 24H2 and 25H2, the executable name change is no longer required and has been rolled back. 

Was this a security, reliability, or compliance issue? 

  • This was not a security or compliance issue. 
  • It was a platform compatibility issue in Windows. 
  • No customer data, identity, or tenant configuration was at risk. 

Was my tenant impacted? 

Only organizations participating in our Technology Adoption Program (TAP) were affected. Specifically, the change applied only to the TAP Admin earlyadopter subset (Ring 1.5). 

If your organization does not participate in the Microsoft Technology Adoption Program, you were not impacted in any way. The change has been fully rolled back for TAP participants, with no lasting configuration or behavioral changes on client machines. No administrator action is required. 

What if we haven’t deployed recent Windows updates yet? 

We understand that many enterprises deploy Windows cumulative updates on managed timelines. 

  • There is no risk or degradation if the referenced Windows KBs are not installed. 
  • New features that depend on these Windows updates will explicitly check for the presence of the required KBs and will only enable when they are available. 
  • If the KBs are not installed, those features simply remain disabled—no functionality breaks and no admin action is required

Windows updates that include the fix 

The Windows compatibility fix is included in Windows updates for versions 24H2 and 25H2, delivered through KB5068861

What to expect next? 

  • No changes to admin configuration or tenant settings 
  • No service disruption 

---Original message---

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Rollout will begin early January 2026 and complete by late January 2026.

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
  • Make sure the same QoS settings applied to ms-teams.exe are also applied to ms-teams_modulehost.exe. Refer to this page for details: Implement Quality of Service (QoS) in Microsoft Teams
    • DO NOT remove QoS settings of ms-teams.exe. Only add QoS settings for ms-teams_modulehost.exe.
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

December 17, 2025 at 8:30 PM Updated
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-12-12T18:29:54.280Z
New
2025-12-17T18:18:50.843Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated December 12, 2025: Thank you for the valuable feedback we’ve received. We are currently reassessing the rollout timelines to ensure alignment with your needs and operational requirements. You can expect a formal update from us by mid to late January 2026.

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Updated rollout timing will be announced in January 2026

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
  • Make sure the same QoS settings applied to ms-teams.exe are also applied to ms-teams_modulehost.exe. Refer to this page for details: Implement Quality of Service (QoS) in Microsoft Teams
    • DO NOT remove QoS settings of ms-teams.exe. Only add QoS settings for ms-teams_modulehost.exe.
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

New

Updated December 17, 2025: We understand that implementing the current guidance involves considerable effort for administrators, and we are actively working to reduce this impact. We are exploring ways to make policy changes as seamless as possible, in close partnership with the Windows team.

Given this ongoing work, we recommend pausing any testing or configuration updates related to this feature. Updated instructions and revised guidance will be shared as part of the formal communication planned for January 2026.

Thank you for the valuable feedback we’ve received. We are currently reassessing the rollout timelines to ensure alignment with your needs and operational requirements. You can expect a formal update from us by mid to late January 2026.

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Updated rollout timing will be announced in January 2026

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
  • Make sure the same QoS settings applied to ms-teams.exe are also applied to ms-teams_modulehost.exe. Refer to this page for details: Implement Quality of Service (QoS) in Microsoft Teams
    • DO NOT remove QoS settings of ms-teams.exe. Only add QoS settings for ms-teams_modulehost.exe.
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

December 12, 2025 at 8:30 PM Updated
Summary
Previous
Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows will introduce a new process, ms-teams_modulehost.exe, to handle calling features separately, improving performance and startup time. Rollout begins January 2026. Admins should allowlist the new process in security software and inform helpdesk staff; no user workflow changes expected.
New
Thank you for the valuable feedback we’ve received. We are currently reassessing the rollout timelines to ensure alignment with your needs and operational requirements. You can expect a formal update from us by mid to late January 2026.
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-11-26T18:18:12.733Z
New
2025-12-12T18:29:54.280Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated November 26, 2025: We have updated the content below to provide additional information. Thank you for your feedback.

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Worldwide, GCC, GCC High, and DoD: Rollout will begin early January 2026 and complete by late January 2026.

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
  • Make sure the same QoS settings applied to ms-teams.exe are also applied to ms-teams_modulehost.exe. Refer to this page for details: Implement Quality of Service (QoS) in Microsoft Teams
    • DO NOT remove QoS settings of ms-teams.exe. Only add QoS settings for ms-teams_modulehost.exe.
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

New

Updated December 12, 2025: Thank you for the valuable feedback we’ve received. We are currently reassessing the rollout timelines to ensure alignment with your needs and operational requirements. You can expect a formal update from us by mid to late January 2026.

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Updated rollout timing will be announced in January 2026

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
  • Make sure the same QoS settings applied to ms-teams.exe are also applied to ms-teams_modulehost.exe. Refer to this page for details: Implement Quality of Service (QoS) in Microsoft Teams
    • DO NOT remove QoS settings of ms-teams.exe. Only add QoS settings for ms-teams_modulehost.exe.
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

Is Major Change
Previous
true
New
N/A
November 26, 2025 at 8:31 PM Updated
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-11-25T18:41:09.427Z
New
2025-11-26T18:18:12.733Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated November 25, 2025: We have updated the content below to provide additional information. Thank you for your feedback.

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Worldwide, GCC, GCC High, and DoD: Rollout will begin early January 2026 and complete by late January 2026.

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
  • Make sure the same QoS settings applied to ms-teams.exe are also applied to ms-teams_modulehost.exe. Refer to this page for details: Implement Quality of Service (QoS) in Microsoft Teams
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

New

Updated November 26, 2025: We have updated the content below to provide additional information. Thank you for your feedback.

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Worldwide, GCC, GCC High, and DoD: Rollout will begin early January 2026 and complete by late January 2026.

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
  • Make sure the same QoS settings applied to ms-teams.exe are also applied to ms-teams_modulehost.exe. Refer to this page for details: Implement Quality of Service (QoS) in Microsoft Teams
    • DO NOT remove QoS settings of ms-teams.exe. Only add QoS settings for ms-teams_modulehost.exe.
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

November 25, 2025 at 8:31 PM Updated
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-11-25T16:48:23.683Z
New
2025-11-25T18:41:09.427Z
Body Content
Previous

Updated November 25, 2025: We have updated the content below to show as intended. Thank you for your feedback.

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Worldwide, GCC, GCC High, and DoD: Rollout will begin early January 2026 and complete by late January 2026.

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

New

Updated November 25, 2025: We have updated the content below to provide additional information. Thank you for your feedback.

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Worldwide, GCC, GCC High, and DoD: Rollout will begin early January 2026 and complete by late January 2026.

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
  • Make sure the same QoS settings applied to ms-teams.exe are also applied to ms-teams_modulehost.exe. Refer to this page for details: Implement Quality of Service (QoS) in Microsoft Teams
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

November 25, 2025 at 6:30 PM Updated
Title
Previous
Upcoming Change to Teams Desktop Client on Windows
New
(Updated) Upcoming Change to Teams Desktop Client on Windows
Last Updated Date
Previous
2025-11-25T00:01:09.787Z
New
2025-11-25T16:48:23.683Z
Tags
Previous
Feature update,User impact,Admin impact
New
Updated message,Feature update,User impact,Admin impact
Body Content
Previous
[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Worldwide, GCC, GCC High, and DoD: Rollout will begin early January 2026 and complete by late January 2026.

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
  • Learn more about Teams performance improvements: https://learn.microsoft.com/microsoftteams/Microsoft Teams documentation.
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

New

Updated November 25, 2025: We have updated the content below to show as intended. Thank you for your feedback.

[Introduction]

We’re improving the performance and startup time of calling features in the Microsoft Teams Desktop Client for Windows. To achieve this, we’re introducing a new child process named ms-teams_modulehost.exe that will handle the calling stack separately from the main application process (ms-teams.exe). This change optimizes resource usage and enhances meeting experiences.

[When this will happen:]

Worldwide, GCC, GCC High, and DoD: Rollout will begin early January 2026 and complete by late January 2026.

Note: Timelines may shift due to year-end feature flag rollout freeze.

[How this affects your organization:]
  • Who is affected: All users running the Teams Desktop Client on Windows.
  • What will happen:
    • A new process (ms-teams_modulehost.exe) will appear in Task Manager under the main Teams process (ms-teams.exe).
    • This process is dedicated to calling features and improves performance.
    • No changes to user workflows or UI; however, admins should ensure endpoint and security software allow this new process.
[What you can do to prepare:]
  • Update endpoint management and security software to allowlist ms-teams_modulehost.exe alongside ms-teams.exe.
  • Communicate this change to helpdesk staff to avoid confusion during troubleshooting.
  • Update internal documentation if you reference Teams process names.
[Compliance considerations:]

No compliance considerations identified, review as appropriate for your organization.

Is Major Change
Previous
New
New
true

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