Confluence Templates
Templates are pre-built page structures you reuse to create consistent pages quickly. Instead of formatting every meeting note or project brief from scratch, you open a template and fill in the blanks. Templates save time and make sure every page follows the same structure.
Why Templates Matter
Without templates, each person on your team formats the same type of page differently. One person writes meeting notes as a numbered list. Another uses a table. A third writes prose paragraphs. Finding specific information across ten different formats wastes time. Templates enforce one structure so all pages of the same type look identical.
Without vs With Templates
WITHOUT TEMPLATE WITH TEMPLATE
────────────────────────────────────── ──────────────────────────────────────
Meeting note by Priya: bullet list Meeting Note Template:
Meeting note by Raj: paragraph blocks Date:
Meeting note by Sam: numbered list Attendees:
Decisions:
No two pages look the same. Action Items:
Searching for "decisions" across Attachments:
20 notes takes a long time. Every page looks identical. Search
finds decisions in every note fast.
Two Sources of Templates
Confluence templates come from two sources: Atlassian's built-in template library and custom templates your team creates.
Template Sources
SOURCE CREATED BY EXAMPLES
────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Built-in templates Atlassian Meeting Notes, Product Requirements,
Retrospective, Decision Log, Onboarding
Custom templates You or your team Company-specific formats, internal
style guides, branded structures
Using a Built-In Template
Create a new page, then click Templates on the right side of the editor. Browse by category or search for a template name. Click any template to apply it — the page fills with the template's structure immediately.
Template Selection Flow
STEP 1 → Press C (or click +) to create a new page STEP 2 → Click "Templates" on the right panel STEP 3 → Search or browse the library STEP 4 → Click a template to preview it STEP 5 → Click "Use template" STEP 6 → The template loads in your editor STEP 7 → Fill in the placeholders STEP 8 → Publish
Popular Built-In Templates
Meeting Notes Template
SECTION PURPOSE ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Date and Attendees Who was in the meeting and when Goals What the meeting aimed to achieve Discussion Points Topics covered and key points made Decisions What was agreed or approved Action Items Who does what and by when Next Meeting Date of the follow-up
Product Requirements Template
SECTION PURPOSE ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Overview One-paragraph summary of the feature Problem Statement What user problem does this solve Goals and Success How you measure success Requirements Functional and non-functional needs Open Questions Unanswered decisions still needed Out of Scope What this work deliberately excludes
Retrospective Template
SECTION PURPOSE ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────── What Went Well Positives to reinforce What Could Improve Areas to change next sprint Action Items Specific improvements with owners
Creating a Custom Template
When no built-in template fits your team's needs, create your own. Custom templates live inside a specific space and are available to everyone in that space.
Steps to Create a Custom Template
STEP 1 → Go to your space
STEP 2 → Click Space Settings (cog ⚙ icon in left sidebar)
STEP 3 → Click "Templates"
STEP 4 → Click "Create new template"
STEP 5 → Design the page structure with headings,
tables, and placeholder text
STEP 6 → Click Publish
RESULT → Your template appears in the template picker
for everyone in the space
Placeholder Text Best Practice
BAD PLACEHOLDER: "Write something here"
GOOD PLACEHOLDER: "Summarise the problem in 2-3 sentences.
Include the affected user type and business impact."
Descriptive placeholders act as inline instructions. They tell the page author exactly what to write, not just where to write it.
Editing and Updating Templates
Go to Space Settings → Templates to edit any existing custom template. Changes to a template do not affect pages already created from it — only new pages use the updated version. Keep this in mind when fixing errors in a template: you may need to update already-published pages manually.
Template Variables
Confluence templates support variables — placeholders that prompt the user to enter a specific value when creating a page from the template. A date variable inserts today's date automatically. A text variable opens a prompt asking for a specific input before the page opens.
Variable Types
VARIABLE TYPE EXAMPLE INPUT OUTPUT ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Text "Project Name" Prompts user to type a name Multi-line "Description" Prompts for a paragraph Date "Sprint Start Date" Opens a date picker List "Status: Draft / Final" Shows a dropdown to choose
Variables speed up page creation by automatically filling repeated details. A meeting notes template with a date variable inserts today's date for you — no typing needed.
