Meeting Notes Template

Free meeting notes template with agenda, attendees, decisions, parking lot, and action items. Edit online, share with your team, and export as PDF or Word.

What's included

  • Meeting purpose, facilitator, note taker, date, time, and location fields
  • Attendees and apologies sections for a complete meeting record
  • Agenda, per-topic discussion notes, and parking lot prompts
  • Decisions list that separates commitments from conversation
  • Action items table with owner, due date, and status
  • Next meeting placeholder for carry-over topics

Preview

Meeting Title

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

Purpose

[Write the outcome this meeting needs to produce. A clear purpose keeps the discussion focused and makes the notes easier to review later.]

Attendees

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

Apologies: [Names]

Agenda

  1. [Topic 1] - [Owner, time]
  2. [Topic 2] - [Owner, time]
  3. [Topic 3] - [Owner, time]

Discussion Notes

1. [Topic 1]

[Capture key points, options considered, questions raised, and context worth remembering. Do not try to write a transcript.]

2. [Topic 2]

[Discussion notes]

3. [Topic 3]

[Discussion notes]

Decisions

  • [Decision] - agreed by [who]
  • [Decision] - agreed by [who]

Action Items

ActionOwnerDue DateStatus
[What needs to happen][Name][YYYY-MM-DD]Open
[Next item][Name][YYYY-MM-DD]Open

Parking Lot

  • [Useful topic that should be handled later]
  • [Question that needs more information]

Next Meeting

Date: [YYYY-MM-DD]
Topics to cover: [Carry-over items]

How to use this template

  1. Set the meeting purpose first — Write the outcome the meeting needs to produce before discussion starts. This helps everyone tell the difference between useful context and side conversation.
  2. Capture agenda topics as headings — Paste or write the agenda before the meeting begins. During the meeting, add notes under the matching topic instead of creating one long transcript.
  3. Separate decisions from discussion — Decisions should be easy to find after the meeting. Move anything agreed into the Decisions section and leave background details in the discussion notes.
  4. Assign every action item — Each action item needs an owner, due date, and current status. If no one owns it, it is not really an action item yet.
  5. Share the recap quickly — Send the notes within 24 hours while the context is still fresh. A short, accurate recap prevents repeated conversations and missed follow-up.

Frequently asked questions

What should meeting notes include?

Useful meeting notes include the attendees, agenda, key discussion points, decisions, and action items. The most important sections are decisions and action items because they turn the meeting into follow-through. A concise summary is usually more valuable than a transcript.

Who should take meeting notes?

The best note taker is usually someone who can listen for decisions and commitments without leading every part of the conversation. For recurring meetings, rotate the role so the work is shared. Always name the note taker at the top so people know who owns the recap.

How soon should meeting notes be shared?

Share meeting notes the same day when possible, and within 24 hours at the latest. Notes lose value quickly because people forget details and action items start to drift. A prompt recap gives everyone a shared record while the discussion is still clear.