Microsoft teams custom emoji reactions preview – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
Skip to main content

Microsoft Teams is adding a Slack-favorite emoji feature

The ability to add custom emoji and reactions will be available for Teams users sometime in June.

The ability to add custom emoji and reactions will be available for Teams users sometime in June.

Vector illustration of the Microsoft Teams logo.
Vector illustration of the Microsoft Teams logo.
Microsoft is adding custom emoji to Teams.
Image: The Verge
Jess Weatherbed
is a news writer focused on creative industries, computing, and internet culture. Jess started her career at TechRadar, covering news and hardware reviews.

Microsoft is adding a new feature to its Teams communications platform that enables users to upload their own custom emoji to use in reactions and messages. Announced during its Build developer conference on Tuesday, Microsoft says the new custom emoji will be available to try next month via the Teams public preview, with the goal of helping Teams users collaborate and express themselves “more creatively and authentically.”

IT admins for businesses that use Teams will have the ability to limit which users can upload or delete custom emoji, or they can turn the feature off entirely. Once custom emoji are uploaded into Teams, they’ll only be visible within the same organization domain. Microsoft says that general availability for custom emoji is expected sometime this July.

A gif demonstrating the new custom emojis coming to Microsoft Teams.
Here’s an example of how the custom emoji options will be presented to Teams users.
Image: Microsoft

The announcement comes three months after Microsoft employees discovered an early version of the feature on an internal Teams build, finding an animated emoji of the widely memed Pepe the Frog character in some reactions and messages. Currently, Microsoft Teams only supports official Unicode emoji — the standardized array of public domain emoji supported by most smartphones and social media platforms.

In contrast to other communications platforms, Microsoft is very late to the custom emoji party. It’s been a prominent feature on Slack and Discord for years already, while Google Chat rolled out a similar feature for Workspace users back in 2022.

Notepad by Tom Warren

A weekly newsletter uncovering the secrets and strategy behind Microsoft’s era-defining bets on AI, gaming, and computing.

Subscribe
Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.