Confluence Comments and Feedback
Comments in Confluence let your team discuss, review, and refine content directly on the page — without sending a single email. Every comment stays attached to the page it belongs to, so feedback never gets lost in someone's inbox.
Two Types of Comments
Confluence provides two distinct comment types. Each one serves a different feedback purpose.
Comment Types Explained
TYPE WHERE IT LIVES BEST FOR ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Page Comment At the bottom of the page General feedback on the whole page Inline Comment Attached to specific text Feedback on one sentence or section
Visual Comparison
PAGE:
"The new supplier delivers every Tuesday..." ← [highlighted text]
│
└─► INLINE COMMENT:
"Should this be Wednesday
from next month?"
— Priya
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
PAGE COMMENTS (bottom of page)
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
Raj: "This page looks good overall.
Can we add the emergency contact?"
Adding a Page Comment
Scroll to the bottom of any published page. Click the Add a comment box. Type your feedback, then click Save. Your comment appears immediately and notifies the page author.
Page Comment Flow
STEP 1 → Open the published page STEP 2 → Scroll to the bottom comment box STEP 3 → Click inside the box and type your comment STEP 4 → Click Save RESULT → Comment posts · Page author gets notified
Adding an Inline Comment
Inline comments attach directly to a specific word, sentence, or paragraph. This is ideal for reviewing documents because feedback points precisely at the text it refers to.
Inline Comment Steps
STEP 1 → Highlight the specific text you want to comment on STEP 2 → A comment icon (💬) appears in the margin STEP 3 → Click the icon to open a comment box STEP 4 → Type your feedback and click Save STEP 5 → The highlighted text turns yellow on the page STEP 6 → Readers click the yellow highlight to read your comment
Replying to a Comment
Comments support threaded replies. Click Reply beneath any comment to respond within the same thread. This keeps related feedback grouped together.
Threaded Comment Example
💬 Priya: "I think section 2 needs more examples."
└── 💬 Raj: "Agreed. I'll add two examples by Friday."
└── 💬 Priya: "Thanks! I'll review once you publish."
Threaded replies track a whole conversation in one place. You read the full discussion without switching to email or chat.
Resolving Comments
Once feedback is acted on, resolve the comment to close it. Click the Resolve button (✓) on any comment. The comment disappears from the page view but stays stored in the comment history.
Comment Lifecycle
Open comment → Discussed → Action taken → Resolved
│ │ │ │
Visible Replies Page updated Hidden from
on page added here or confirmed normal view
Resolved comments are not deleted. Click Show resolved at the bottom of the page to see the full history of all comments, open and resolved.
Reactions — Quick Feedback Without Words
Sometimes you want to acknowledge a page without writing a comment. Reactions let you add an emoji response with one click. Click the Like button or the emoji icon below the page title.
When to Use Reactions vs Comments
USE REACTION WHEN USE COMMENT WHEN ──────────────────────────────────── ────────────────────────────────────── You agree with the content You have a specific question You want to acknowledge the work You see an error or missing info No additional feedback needed You want a reply or discussion Quick approval on a minor update The page needs a change
Email Notifications for Comments
Confluence sends an email notification to the page author whenever someone posts a comment. Teammates who watch the page also receive notifications.
Notification Triggers
ACTION WHO GETS NOTIFIED ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── New page comment Page author + page watchers New inline comment Page author + page watchers Reply to a comment Original commenter + watchers Comment resolved Person who opened the comment
Manage your notification preferences from Profile → Settings → Email to control how often Confluence emails you. You can switch from immediate emails to a daily digest if comment notifications become too frequent.
