If you’re a Microsoft Teams user, you may have noticed that the sidebar has disappeared. This is because Microsoft is working on a new feature called “sidebar hiding.” This new feature will make it so that the sidebar is hidden when you’re not using it, and it will also hide the sidebar if you’re using a different browser or device. If you’re not happy with this new feature, there are a few ways to disable it. The first way is to go to Settings > Team > Sidebar and uncheck the box next to “show sidebar when not in use.” The second way is to go to Settings > Team > Appearance and uncheck the box next to “show sidebar when in use.” The last way is to go to Settings > Team > Preferences and uncheck the box next to “show sidebar when in use.” If you decide that you don’t want this new sidebar feature, be sure to tell your team members so! It can be difficult for team members to keep up with changes in Microsoft Teams, and having a clear understanding of what’s going on can help everyone stay organized.


The sidebar that shows your teams and chats in Microsoft Teams can be hidden when you don’t need it. Microsoft has made changing this setting very unintuitive, but it’s easy once you know where it’s hiding.

Having a sidebar or navigation pane on the left side of an app is perfectly normal—almost every email client has one, for example—and many apps give you the option to toggle it on or off. Microsoft Teams is no exception, but for some reason, the company made the toggle hard to find, and you can’t toggle the sidebar on and off if you have a chat open.

This basically means that you can toggle the sidebar on and off when you have a tab open in a channel, as long as it’s not the “Posts” channel. You can’t toggle the sidebar on and off if you’re in a chat.

To toggle the sidebar, open a tab in a Teams channel and click the two diagonal arrows found to the right of the tabs.

This will hide the sidebar. To show it again, click the diagonal arrows again.

A clue to Microsoft’s thinking is that if you hover over the diagonal arrows, the tooltip reads “Expand Tab” if the sidebar is visible, or “Collapse Tab” if the sidebar isn’t visible. Clearly, the design team was thinking more about giving extra screen space for the tab you’re looking at, rather than letting you hide the toolbar just because you don’t want to see it.