Microsoft Teams Downdetector Shows 226 Reports at 9:08 a.m.
Microsoft Teams Downdetector showed 226 reports at 9:08 a.m. as users said the Microsoft Teams app was not working. The reporting spike pointed to trouble inside a collaboration tool many people use for chat, video conferencing, and file sharing within Microsoft 365.
Microsoft Teams and Downdetector
Downdetector.com tracked the complaints in real time. That gave the outage a specific number instead of a vague wave of user frustration.
Teams sits inside Microsoft 365 and combines chat, video conferencing, and file sharing. When a service built around those functions goes sideways, users lose one place for message threads, meetings, and shared documents at the same time.
226 reports at 9:08 a.m.
The key data point was 226 reports as of 9:08 a.m. That is the clearest sign in the available facts that the problem had reached a visible level, not just isolated complaints.
The report count also limits how much can be concluded. It shows volume, not cause, so the only hard line here is that users were reporting an outage on Downdetector at that moment.
Microsoft 365 users
For people relying on Teams for work, the immediate takeaway is simple: check whether the app is loading properly before assuming the issue sits on your device or account. The outage reports were tied to the app itself, not to a single named office, city, or customer segment.
The unresolved issue is the cause of the disruption. The facts stop at the 9:08 a.m. report count, so the next thing readers would need is whether Microsoft restores normal service or whether the report total keeps climbing.