Microsoft says new Teams location feature isn’t for ’employee tracking’
Image: Microsoft, Pixabay
For better or worse, Microsoft Teams is one of the most important communication apps in the professional world. It’s used by millions for chat messages, video conferences, and sending files. According to the Microsoft 365 Roadmap, Teams is getting a new feature in April 2026 that automatically updates your location status as you move around.
The new feature was initially described as follows:
“When users connect to their organization’s Wi-Fi, Teams will soon be able to automatically update their work location to reflect the building they’re working from. This feature will be off by default. Tenant admins will decide whether to enable it and require end-users to opt-in.”
That might sound pretty tame on paper, but there are unsettling implications that could arise from this feature. In short, everyone in the Teams organization will always know where their colleagues are in real-time as they move around from Wi-Fi access point to access point. This will make it easier to drop in on a colleague unannounced or quickly arrange a physical meeting. Moreover, it also means you won’t be able to retreat to a far corner of the office in hopes of remaining undetected so you can work in peace and quiet.
Above all, however, this new automatic location-setting feature could be used by employers to monitor their employees. Is Employee A adhering to hybrid work guidelines like “two days at home and three days in the office”? Is Employee B always working from home and skipping out on in-office days? Taken to the extreme, it could even be used to note when Employee C arrives on site to determine tardiness. For companies pushing return-to-office on their employees, this new Teams feature might even be used for policy enforcement.
Update: It’s not meant to track users
Recently, Microsoft released another support page with further details on what this feature will look like in practice:
Two distinct location signals are supported:
Planned work location. User-entered intent. Users can create a recurring work plan in the Outlook or Teams calendar Settings, and one-off plans directly in the calendar grid.
Actual work location. System‑detected or manually set location, based on check‑in.
Users can choose whether to share their work location with coworkers. Work location can only be shared inside users’ organization and is not visible to Microsoft.
The support page continues with emphasis:
Automatic Update of work location is always off by default and must be explicitly enabled and configured for your organization. You can enable Automatic Update for your entire organization or for select users.
When Automatic Update is enabled, users’ work location can be updated via two signals: connection to a wireless network or connection to a desk peripheral, such as a monitor. As an admin, you can choose to set up either one or both of these signals. Setting up both signals improves the accuracy of users’ work location.
And Microsoft really wants to allay fears of this feature being used as an employee tracking or monitoring tool:
What Automatic Update doesn’t do
Automatic Update is not a tracking tool and can’t be used to monitor employee attendance. The feature is designed to facilitate collaboration, not compliance or oversight.
Automatic Update doesn’t prevent users from manually setting or clearing their work location.
Automatic Update doesn’t provide admins with monitoring or reporting views, nor with historical location data.
The feature is currently marked as “in development” with a global rollout planned for April 2026 across Windows and macOS systems. Microsoft originally wanted to release this feature as early as December 2025, but postponed to February, then March, and now April 2026.
This article originally appeared on our sister publication PC-WELT and was translated and localized from German.
Author: Hans-Christian Dirscherl, Managing Editor, PC-WELT
Hans-Christian Dirscherl began his IT life with Autoexec.bat and config.sys, Turbo-Pascal and C, Sinix and Wordperfect. He has been writing on almost all IT topics for around 25 years, covering everything from news to reviews and buying guides.