Microsoft to Retire Teams Together Mode on June 30


TL;DR

  • June Retirement: Microsoft says it will retire Teams Together Mode on June 30, 2026, after months of signaling the change.
  • Layout Shift: Teams will remove the feature’s scenes and menu toggle while leaning on Gallery and branded backgrounds for larger meetings.
  • User Impact: Routine meetings stay intact, but staged classes, town halls, and branded sessions lose fixed virtual seating and shared-room presentation effects.

Microsoft says it will retire the pandemic-era Together Mode feature in Teams on June 30, 2026. The move removes a meeting layout, not ordinary calls, chat, or Teams itself. Users who relied on staged scenes lose a specialized presentation format rather than the core meeting service.

Together Mode was introduced in 2020, when remote work and online classes surged during the COVID-19 pandemic, as a way to make video meetings feel more like shared physical spaces. Instead of showing participants only in separate grid boxes, the feature used virtual scenes, such as auditoriums or classrooms, to place people together in a single staged layout. That made it useful for some classes, town halls, and branded events, but it remained a specialized meeting view rather than a core part of Teams calling or chat.

Teams will also remove the pandemic-era feature’s View menu toggle as the change rolls out. Classes, town halls, and branded sessions also lose scene and seat controls that let organizers place participants inside a shared layout. Standard meetings stay in place while the staging layer disappears.

Why Microsoft Is Removing the Feature

Microsoft says the change will retire Together Mode and reduce engineering complexity so more work can go to video quality, stability, and performance. Microsoft is effectively choosing to simplify one corner of Teams instead of carrying a separate presentation layer with its own controls and support burden.

Microsoft also argues the modern Gallery view now covers the main use case, while Large Gallery can appear with ten active cameras. In practice, Teams is leaning on larger standard participant grids instead of a separate virtual auditorium with its own scenes, seating logic, and controls. Routine meetings keep broad visibility, but managed events lose the arranged seating effect that made Together Mode feel different.