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Microsoft Planner 2026 New and Retired Features | Sourcepass MCOE

Written by Nicole Walker | Jan 20, 2026 3:08:33 PM

Microsoft is rebuilding Planner within Teams for early 2026. The update introduces new collaboration features, deeper AI support, and several feature retirements. These changes will affect how organizations manage task and structure workflows.

Planner is moving closer to how Teams already handles communication and coordination. Microsoft is reinforcing Planner as a team‑level task tool rather than a full project management platform. The result  is a more structured, conversation driven approach to tracking work across teams. 

 

Microsoft Planner Changes Coming in 2026

 

In this episode of "What’s New with Microsoft," Wade Walker (VP, Microsoft Alliance, Sourcepass MCOE) outlines the Planner and Teams changes arriving by late February 2026. The updates include task chat, reusable templates, Copilots project manager capabilities, and expanded automation inside Teams. Several long standing Planner integrations are also being retired.

 

 

Key Timestamps

 

  • 00:00 - Introduction

  • 00:49 - Planner aligns closer to Teams

  • 00:59 - Task chat replaces comments

  • 01:22 - Custom templates and reusable layouts

  • 01:43 - Copilot project manager capabilities

  • 02:07 - Deeper Teams and Planner AI integration

  • 02:47 - Sensitivity labels at the task level

  • 03:20 - Retirements and removed features

  • 04:35 - Teams updates beyond Planner

  • 05:05 - What to do next

  • 06:37 - Final thoughts

 

What Changes are Coming to Microsoft Planner in 2026

 

Microsoft is shifting Planner into a more modern task environment. The focus is faster communication, structured templates, AI assistance, and tighter alignment with Teams. Four changes will be immediately noticeable:

  1. Task chat replaces traditional task comments

    The existing comment system is being removed. Task chat introduces real-time messaging with at mentions and richer formatting. Only mentioned users receive notifications. This reduces noise and aligns Planner conversations with how Teams already works. 

  2. Custom templates improve standardization

    Organizations can create reusable Planner templates. Templates define buckets, labels, and other plan elements. This helps teams maintain consistent structure across recurring projects without adding administrative overhead. 

  3. Copilot project manager capabilities

    Copilot can now act as a project manager for licensed users across all plan types. It can summarize risks, identify blockers, and highlight changes. This allows teams to reduce manual status tracking without adopting a separate project management platform. 

  4. Deeper integration between Teams and Planner

    Meeting decisions and action items from Teams are captured and synced into Planner. Teams channels gain new automation through a channel agent that can create and update tasks, answer questions, and generate status reports. Work back plan generation is also available directly in channels.

 

Microsoft Planner Features Being Retired in 2026

 

Several Planner features are being removed in early 2026. Organization using these capabilities should plan replacement workflows.

  1. Whiteboard integration in premium plans

    Automatic whiteboard tabs and sticky note task conversion are removed. Existing boards remain accessible in the Whiteboard app.  

  2. iCalendar feed

    Planner tasks will no longer sync to external calendars.

  3. Loop components

    Planner boards will no longer embed directly in Loop pages. Loop will display a link to the plan instead.

  4. Traditional task comments

    Comments are replaced by task chat in basic plans. Historical comments remain accessible Outlook.

  5. Viva Goals integration

    Since Viva Goals is being retired, its Planner integration is also being removed.

These retirements reinforce Microsoft’s direction for Planner as a focused task tool rather than a portfolio management system.

 

Microsoft Teams Updates Related to Planner in 2026

 

Several Teams updates support the shift toward AI‑assisted collaboration.

  1. Improved meeting layout control

    Meetings include a resizable divider for adjusting shared content and video tiles.

  2. Express Voice Enrollment

    A faster enrollment process improves speaker attribution in transcripts and Copilot recaps.

  3. Facilitator integration

    Facilitator can capture decisions and convert them into structured Planner tasks during meetings, reducing follow up work. 

 

Preparing your Organization for the 2026 Planner Changes

 

This update goes beyond feature improvements. It changes how Planner is used day-to-day.

Recommended next steps: 

  1. Clarify Planner's role as a team level task tool

  2. Document dependencies on retiring features

  3. Standardize Planner templates by department

  4. Pilot task level sensitivity labels and DLP behavior

  5. Test Copilot project manager and channel agents where licensed 

 

Moving Forward with the 2026 Planner Changes

 

Organizations that rely on Planner can use this update to introduce more structure, standardize workflows, and test AI assisted planning. Planner is evolving to match how work happens inside Teams. 

If you need help assessing your environment or preparing for these changes, the Sourcepass MCOE team can support planning and execution.

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