Google Chat is getting a small but genuinely useful upgrade: a dedicated “Meetings” section that pulls all your meeting-related chats into one organized place, instead of letting them drown in an endless list of DMs and spaces. It’s a subtle UI tweak on the surface, but it sits on top of a bigger shift Google’s been making over the past year—turning Meet and Chat into a continuous, searchable hub for everything that happens before, during, and after a meeting.
Until now, every “meeting conversation” in Google Chat lived under Direct Messages, mixed in with one-on-one chats, random team banter, and automated bot notifications. If you had multiple recurring meetings with overlapping attendees, good luck remembering which DM thread had the key decisions or that one link someone shared at the last minute. Google is trying to fix exactly that mess with the new Meetings section, which acts like a smart folder that automatically collects all continuous meeting chats—past and future—in one dedicated bucket in your conversation list.
Here’s how it works in practice. When you enable the feature, Google Chat adds a “Meetings” section in the left-hand conversation list, just below Direct Messages and Spaces on desktop. Any meeting with continuous chat enabled—those threads that start from “Chat with guests” in Calendar or from the in-call chat in Google Meet—will automatically live there, and when a meeting ends, the associated conversation quietly moves into that Meetings section instead of cluttering your DMs. You still see the same messages, reactions, files, and links, but they’re now grouped contextually by what they actually are: meeting discussions, not generic chats.
Functionally, the Meetings section behaves like the custom sections Google rolled out to Chat earlier, which let you create your own buckets (like “Priority,” “Clients,” or “Follow-ups”) and reorder or resize them in the sidebar. You can move the Meetings section up or down in the list, adjust where it sits relative to your other sections, or even move specific meeting threads into your own custom section if you want to treat a high‑stakes project differently. You’re not locked into Google’s defaults either—the whole thing is optional and off by default, so you only get it if it genuinely fits how you work.
Turning it on is pretty straightforward. Once the rollout hits your account, you may see an in-app promo banner or tooltip in Chat that offers to “Try” the new Meetings section; click that and Chat creates the section for you automatically. If you don’t see the prompt, you can manually enable it from the three‑dot menu on any section in your conversation list by choosing “Create a meeting section” and confirming. From there, Chat will start treating your continuous meeting conversations as a separate category and drop them into that section, while still letting you move or remove the section entirely if you change your mind.
What makes this more than just sidebar housekeeping is how it ties into Google’s broader push for “continuous meeting chat.” In late 2025, Google flipped the switch so that in-meeting messages in Google Meet are powered by Google Chat, turning what used to be disposable meeting chat into a persistent history you can revisit later. That means all those emoji reactions, quick clarifications, shared Docs, Slides, and links sent during a call no longer vanish when the meeting ends—they live in a Chat conversation that exists before, during, and after the call. The new Meetings section is essentially Google’s way of giving those now‑persistent conversations a proper home so they don’t get lost in everyday chatter.
For teams that run on recurring standups, weekly reviews, or client check-ins, this can meaningfully reduce the friction of “where was that again?” hunts. Instead of digging through Calendar, Meet, and Chat separately, you jump into the Meetings section and scroll through conversations that are inherently tied to scheduled events and attendees. Need to confirm what the team agreed on during last Thursday’s sprint review or grab a link someone dropped five minutes before the call? It’s all in the same conversational thread associated with that meeting, and now it’s surfaced in a dedicated area you know to check first.
From an admin standpoint, this update is deliberately hands-off. There’s no new toggle tucked away in the Admin console; IT doesn’t have to configure anything for the Meetings section to exist. The underlying data still respects the existing Google Chat retention and data loss prevention rules that admins already enforce, especially since in-meeting chats have been flowing through Chat’s infrastructure since the continuous chat shift in 2025. It’s an end‑user quality‑of‑life feature on top of the existing compliance and governance setup, not a new policy surface someone needs to learn.
Availability-wise, Google is rolling this out gradually, with the usual two‑track cadence. Rapid Release domains started seeing the Meetings section from March 19, 2026, and the rollout there can take up to 15 days to reach all users. Scheduled Release domains will follow with their own gradual rollout starting April 2, 2026, again with up to 15 days before everyone sees it. And unlike some Workspace changes that are reserved for paid tiers, this one is broadly available: it’s coming to all Google Workspace customers, Workspace Individual subscribers, and even personal Google accounts.
The move fits neatly into a pattern for Google Chat over the last couple of years. First, Google made Meet conversations persistent in Chat so teams could treat meetings as part of an ongoing thread rather than a one‑off event. Then it shipped custom sections and a unified scrolling conversation list so power users could tame busy sidebars and group conversations by their own mental model instead of the default DM/Spaces split. Now, with a dedicated Meetings section, Google is layering in a more opinionated structure for the specific type of conversations that often matter most: the ones tied to scheduled meetings, decisions, and project milestones.
For everyday users, the impact will probably feel subtle at first—just one more section in an already busy sidebar—but the payoff shows up over time. As more teams rely on Meet chat for pre‑reads, quick decisions, and link sharing, having all of that collected under a single, predictable Meetings bucket makes Chat feel less chaotic and more like a proper system of record for collaboration. It’s the kind of change that doesn’t scream “major update” in a changelog, but if you live in Google Chat all day, it might quietly become one of the features you don’t want to work without.
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