Shared channels in Microsoft Teams

Shared channels in Microsoft Teams create collaboration spaces where you can invite people who aren't in the team. Only the users who are owners or members of the shared channel can access the channel. While guests (people with Microsoft Entra guest accounts in your organization.) can't be added to a shared channel, you can invite people outside your organization to participate in a shared channel by using Microsoft Entra B2B direct connect.

You might want to use a shared channel if you want to collaborate with a group of people who are all members of different teams. For example, people from engineering, sales, and support who all work on different aspects of the same project or product could use a shared channel to collaborate.

Only members of shared channels can see and participate in shared channels that they're added to. Other members of the team to which the shared channel is connected won't see the channel.

When a shared channel is created, it's linked to the parent team and can't be moved to a different team. Additionally, shared channels can't be converted to standard channels and vice versa.

Compare shared channels with other types of channels.

Getting started with shared channels

Shared channels is enabled by default in Teams. You can choose if people can create shared channels, if they can share them with people outside your organization, and if they can participate in external shared channels by creating a channel policy.

If you plan to share channels with people outside your organization, read Plan external collaboration for important planning considerations.

Sharing channels with people outside your organization also requires that you configure cross-tenant access settings in Microsoft Entra ID. Each organization that you want to share channels with must also complete this configuration. See Collaborate with external participants in a channel for details. Note that while shared channels with external participants don't use guest accounts, guest access in Teams must be enabled to invite them.

Shared channel creation

Only team owners can create a shared channel. Team members can't create them. The ability to create shared channels can be managed at the organization level. Use policies to control which users in your organization are allowed to create shared channels.

The person who creates a shared channel becomes the shared channel owner and only the shared channel owner can directly add or remove people from it. (You can add more than one owner if you want.) A shared channel owner can add anyone from the organization to a shared channel they created. Members of a shared channel have a secure conversation space, and when new members are added, they can see all conversations (even old conversations) in that shared channel.

Team owners can see the names of all shared channels in their team and can also delete any shared channel in the team. Team owners can't see the files in a shared channel or the conversations and member list of a shared channel unless they're members of that shared channel.

Team members can only see shared channels that they've been added to.

Cloning a team won't clone the associated shared channels.

Shared channel deletion

Deleted shared channel can be restored within 30 days after deletion. When a deleted shared channel is restored, all previous memberships (individual and team sharing) will be restored.

Deleted teams can be restored within 30 days after deletion. When a team is deleted, all shared channels will also be deleted. When a deleted team is restored, all shared channels will be restored as well with all sharing relationships.

When a team is archived, individual sharing will remain intact, but sharing with teams other than the parent team will be removed. When archived team is unarchived, all shared channels will be restored with individual sharing only.

Adding and removing owners and members

A shared channel owner can't be removed through the Teams client if they're the last owner of one or more shared channels.

If the last shared channel owner leaves your organization or if they're removed from the Microsoft 365 group associated with the team, a member of the shared channel from your organization is automatically promoted to be the shared channel owner. If there are no members from your organization to promote, the shared channel will remain ownerless. A Teams admin will have to manually assign a channel owner. Consider adding more than one owner to avoid this situation.

Guests - including those converted to members (in their user type property) - can't be added to a shared channel.

In the Teams admin center, when adding an external participant who also has a guest account in your organization, you must search on ext:[email protected] to get the external participant's organization account rather than the guest account.

Note

External participants must be added using their UPN, rather than their email address, if the two don't match in Microsoft Entra ID.

Channel owner settings

Each shared channel has its own settings that the channel owner can manage, including the ability to add and remove members, add tabs, and @mentioning for the entire channel. These settings are independent of the parent team settings. When a shared channel is created, it inherits settings from the parent team, after which its settings can be changed independently of the parent team settings.

The shared channel owner can click Manage channel, and then use the Members and Settings tabs to add or remove members and edit settings.

Shared channel owner and member actions

The following table outlines what actions owners, members, and guests can do in shared channels.

Action Team owner Team member Team guest Shared channel owner Shared channel member Shared channel external participant
Create shared channel Admin controlled Admin and team owner controlled No N/A No No
Delete shared channel Yes No No Yes No No
Leave shared channel N/A N/A N/A Yes unless they're the last owner Yes Yes
Edit shared channel No N/A N/A Yes No No
Restore deleted shared channel Yes No No Yes No No
Add members No N/A N/A Yes No No
Edit settings No N/A N/A Yes No No
Manage tabs and apps No N/A N/A Yes, apps must be installed for the team Channel owner controlled No

Shared channel SharePoint sites

Each shared channel has its own SharePoint site. The separate site is to ensure access to shared channel files is restricted to only members of the shared channel. These sites are created with a document library by default, and can be easily enhanced to a full-featured site through the site management interface. Each site is created in the same geographic region as the site for the parent team. These sites have a custom template ID, "TEAMCHANNEL#1", for easier management through PowerShell and Graph API.

A shared channel site inherits the sensitivity label of the parent team. This remains true even if the channel is shared directly with another team.

Note

Only people with owner or member permissions in the channel will have access to content in the shared channel site. People in the parent team and admins won't have access unless they're also channel members.

Membership to the site owner and member groups are kept in sync with the membership of the shared channel. Site permissions for a shared channel site can't be managed independently through SharePoint.

Teams manages the lifecycle of the shared channel site. If the site is deleted outside of Teams, it's restored automatically within four hours as long as the shared channel is still active. If the site is permanently deleted, a new site is provisioned for the shared channel.

If a shared channel or a team containing a shared channel is restored, the sites are restored with it. If a shared channel site is restored and it's beyond the 30-day soft delete window for the shared channel, the site operates as a standalone site.

Shared channel messages

Shared channel messages are stored in a dedicated system mailbox associated with the Shared channel rather than the group mailbox.

For information about performing an eDiscovery search for shared channel messages, see Conduct an eDiscovery investigation of content in Microsoft Teams.

Considerations around file access in shared channels

Files and folders in a shared channel can be shared with people outside the channel (but not outside the organization) by using standard SharePoint file sharing.

If a user is granted access to a file, folder, or notebook in a shared channel through SharePoint, removing the user from the team or shared channel won't remove the user's access to the file, folder, or notebook.

If an existing notebook is added as a tab to a shared channel, access to the shared channel isn't changed and the notebook retains its existing permissions.

Resources for your users

The following articles might be helpful for the users in your organization when they use shared channels.

Create a shared channel in Teams

Share a channel with people in Teams

Share a channel with a team

Why use a shared channel versus other channel types in Teams?

Guests and shared channels in Teams

Shared channel owner and member roles in Teams

Compliance in shared channels

Shared channels are integrated with Microsoft Purview features.

Communications compliance

Admins can set policies to monitor content for all users in the channel. All messages content in channels, including shared channels, is covered by communication compliance policies. Shared channels inherit the policy of the host organization.

Conditional access

Supported conditional access policies from the host organization can be applied to B2B direct connect users. (The external organization's policies are not used.) The following types of conditional access policies are supported with shared channels:

  • Policies that are scoped to All guest and external users, and the Office 365 SharePoint Online cloud app.
  • Grant Access controls that require MFA, a compliant device, or a Microsoft Entra hybrid joined device.

IP-based policies are supported at the SharePoint file level. So an external participant could access shared channel from a restricted location, but be blocked when trying to open a file.

For more information about conditional access for external identities, see Authentication and Conditional Access for External Identities.

Data loss prevention (DLP)

Admins can apply Microsoft Purview DLP policies to a team where all channels, including shared channels, inherit the policy. Shared channels inherit the policy of the host organization.

Retention policy

Admins can apply a retention policy on a team where all channels, including shared channels, inherit the retention policy. Shared channels inherit the policy of the parent team.

Sensitivity labels

Sensitivity labels available in the host organization are the only labels that can be applied to the documents in a shared channel site. A file that is encrypted by a sensitivity label cannot be opened by external participants unless permissions are granted. Automatic labeling is not used.

Shared channels and their associated SharePoint sites inherit the label from the parent team.

Information barriers

Users who are not allowed to communicate per information barrier policies can't be part of shared channel. Information barrier policies are only effective for users in the host organization. If users are external participants in another organization's shared channel, information barrier policies don't apply.

eDiscovery

Admins can perform searches for all users in the channel. All channels, including the shared channel, are discoverable. All message data in the channel regardless of who added the data is discoverable by the compliance admin.

Admins can place channel-only members from the host organization who are not a part of the team on hold. They can also place the entire team on hold. Admins cannot place an external participant on hold.

Audit logs

All the actions performed for existing audit events are audited in shared channels.

Supported apps in shared channels

For information about how to prepare your app for shared channels, see Microsoft Teams Connect shared channels.

The following apps are supported for use in shared channels.

  • Activity
  • Adobe Acrobat Sign
  • Asana
  • Calling
  • Chat
  • Code by Vivani
  • Conceptboard
  • Excel
  • FileBrowser
  • Files
  • Flipgrid
  • Freehand by InVision
  • HeyTaco
  • Jira Cloud
  • Kahoot!
  • Lists
  • Lucidchart
  • Lumio
  • MeisterTask
  • MindMeister
  • Mindomo
  • Miro
  • Monday.com
  • MURAL
  • Nearpod
  • PDF
  • Pear Deck
  • PowerPoint
  • Priority Matrix
  • Quicklinks
  • Quizlet
  • Saved
  • Scrum-Poker
  • Search
  • SharePoint
  • SharePoint Pages
  • Slido
  • Smartsheet
  • SurveyMonkey
  • Tasks in a Box
  • Teams Manager
  • TeamViewer
  • Teamwork
  • Testportal
  • TrackingTime
  • Trello
  • Vevox
  • Visio
  • VSTS
  • Wakelet
  • Web
  • Wooclap
  • Word
  • YouTube
  • Zendesk
  • Zoho Projects

Limits for shared channels

B2B direct connect overview

Configure cross-tenant access settings for B2B direct connect

Overview of teams and channels in Teams

Private channels in Microsoft Teams

Shared channels in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Mechanics