Microsoft Teams will detect and label external meeting assistant bots joining meetings, giving organizers control to approve, deny, or remove them. A new admin policy will manage bot handling, with detection enabled by default starting mid-May to mid-June 2026. This enhances security and compliance visibility.
Introduction
AI‑powered meeting assistant bots—such as transcription and summarization services—are increasingly used to enhance productivity in online meetings. While these tools can be valuable, some bots may access meetings without the knowledge or consent of the meeting organizer or the hosting tenant, which can create data security, privacy, and compliance risks.
To help organizations protect meeting content and increase visibility into automated participants, Microsoft Teams is introducing a new capability that detects external meeting assistant bots as they attempt to join meetings. This update gives organizers greater awareness and control and provides administrators with clear controls to manage how detected bots are handled in meetings hosted across the organization.
This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID 558107.
When this will happen
How this will affect your organization
Who is affected
What will happen


What you can do to prepare
No action is required at this time.
However, we recommend that Teams admins:
Compliance considerations
| Question | Answer |
| Does the change introduce or significantly modify AI/ML or agent capabilities that interact with or provide access to your data? | Yes. This change introduces detection logic that analyzes meeting join metadata to identify external automated bots attempting to join meetings. |
Does the change provide a new way of communicating between users, tenants, or subscriptions? | No. The feature only changes how external meeting assistant bots are surfaced to organizers during the meeting join process, increasing visibility of automated external participants. There is no change in the way participants can communicate with these bots or vice versa. |
Does the change include an admin control, and can it be controlled through Entra ID group membership? | Yes. The change introduces a new meeting policy in the Teams admin center that allows admins to define how detected bots are handled. It cannot be controlled through Entra ID group membership at this time. |