Microsoft isn't waiting for you to be ready. These five Microsoft Teams changes are landing between now and June 2026 and each of them carries real operational risk if you miss the deadline.
Every month, Microsoft pushes hundreds of changes through the Message Center. Some are minor, others have serious impact. This quarter, five Teams updates stand out, not because they're exciting new features, but because missing any one of them could put your environment at risk with zero warning.
This is the kind of change that doesn't announce itself with an error message. It announces itself with an influx in service desk tickets, a missed client call, or a boardroom that doesn't work.
Every month, the ChangePilot Bulletin highlights the top high-impact items from the Microsoft 365 Message Center, so you can see what matters most without reading through hundreds of updates yourself.
Here are the five Teams changes you need to act on, and what will happen if you don’t.
Microsoft withdrew a problematic Teams application version for Teams Displays. Devices that installed the withdrawn build are now non-functional.
Action required:
What happens if you don't act:
This isn't a future risk, it's happening now. Every day you don't act is another day of manual workarounds, frustrated users, and a growing helpdesk queue.
Note: Teams Rooms, Phones, and Panels are unaffected, which means it's easy to miss if you're not actively monitoring your Display estate.
Action required:
What happens if you don't:
For any organisation where external calls are business-critical e.g. client consultations, court communications, time-sensitive negotiations, even a brief inability to make or receive calls is an operational emergency.
If you haven't started procurement by the time you realise the deadline has passed, you're looking at weeks of disruption.
Deadline: 15 May 2026
Teams on the web will only support browsers compliant with ECMAScript 2022. Non-compliant browsers will be blocked.
Note: all current supported releases of Edge, Chrome, Firefox, and Safari are already compliant.
Action required:
What happens if you don't:
Microsoft has been showing reminder banners for months, so if your users are still on non-compliant browsers by May, the question isn’t whether Microsoft warned you, but whether your IT team was watching.
Deadline: April 2026
Microsoft is updating the root Certificate Authority (CA) for the SIP interface used in Teams Direct Routing. If your Session Border Controller (SBC) doesn’t trust the new CA, all PSTN calling via Direct Routing will fail.
Action required:
What happens if you don't:
This is an especially dangerous change because it’s invisible until it breaks. End users won’t see a banner or a warning; they will pick up the phone, try to make a call and get nothing. In environments where external calls are mission-critical, this is the kind of silent failure that can escalate from “IT issue” to “business incident” in minutes.
Deadline: April 2026
Microsoft is introducing license-based management updates for Teams Rooms on Android and other Android-based Teams devices synced to the Teams Rooms Pro Management Portal. Admin portal capabilities will now be gated by license tier (Basic, Standard, Pro).
Action required:
What happens if you don't:
This is a slow-burn risk. It's not a hard deadline that breaks something overnight, but the quiet erosion of your ability to manage and monitor your meeting room estate. By the time the impact surfaces, it looks like IT negligence, not a licensing gap.
These 5 changesn lead to 5 different failures if not addressed. That’s just Teams this quarter. Imagine the impact of missing changes across a whole year and the wider M365 suite.
The story goes: Microsoft publishes a change. It sits in the Message Center alongside hundreds of others and goes unnoticed. Before you know it, the deadline has passed and suddenly, something breaks (a phone, display, browser, meeting) and the service desk tickets come flooding in.
The problem isn’t that the changes are difficult to address. It’s that most teams don’t have a system for surfacing the changes that matter before it’s too late.
ChangePilot monitors every change Microsoft makes to your M365 tenant, filters for impact, and tells you what to do before the deadline, not after the outage. It's the difference between finding out first and finding out when someone complains.
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