Meeting Agenda Template

Free meeting agenda template with purpose, attendees, timed topics, owners, desired outcomes, and preparation notes for better meetings and follow-up.

What's included

  • Date, time, location, and facilitator fields
  • Meeting purpose prompt for a clear outcome
  • Attendees section with roles
  • Timed agenda table with topic owners and desired outcomes
  • Pre-read and preparation notes
  • Works for team meetings, client calls, and planning sessions

Preview

Meeting Agenda - [Meeting Name]

Date: [YYYY-MM-DD]
Time: [Start - End]
Location: [Room or link]
Facilitator: [Name]
Note taker: [Name]

Purpose

[What should this meeting accomplish? Write the decision, alignment, plan, or update needed.]

Attendees

  • [Name] - [Role]
  • [Name] - [Role]

Agenda Items

TimeTopicOwnerDesired Outcome
[10 min][Topic][Owner][Decision, update, brainstorm]
[15 min][Topic][Owner][Outcome]

Pre-Read or Preparation

  • [Document, question, or data to review before the meeting]
  • [Input attendees should prepare]

Expected Decisions

  • [Decision needed]
  • [Decision owner or approver]

Follow-Up Space

Action items to capture: [Use during or after the meeting]
Topics for next meeting: [Carry-over items]

How to use this template

  1. Write the purpose first — A meeting agenda should start with the outcome the meeting needs to produce. If there is no clear purpose, consider sending an update instead.
  2. Assign owners to topics — Each agenda item should have someone responsible for leading it. Topic owners prepare better and keep discussion moving.
  3. Add time boxes — Time boxes help the facilitator protect the meeting from drifting. They also show whether the agenda is too ambitious for the scheduled time.
  4. State the desired outcome — Mark each item as a decision, update, brainstorm, or review. This helps attendees understand what kind of participation is needed.
  5. Send preparation notes early — Share pre-reads and questions before the meeting. Better preparation usually leads to shorter, more useful meetings.

Frequently asked questions

What should a meeting agenda include?

A meeting agenda should include the meeting purpose, attendees, topics, topic owners, time boxes, desired outcomes, and any preparation materials. This makes the meeting easier to facilitate and easier to judge afterward.

How far in advance should I send a meeting agenda?

Send the agenda at least a day before the meeting when possible. For important decisions, send it earlier so people have time to review materials and prepare useful input.

Do all meetings need an agenda?

Any meeting that asks for people time should have at least a short agenda. Even a simple purpose and three topics can prevent confusion and reduce wasted time.