You step away for a quick coffee. Or you don't even step away, you just spend six minutes reading a document without touching the mouse.
You come back, glance at Teams, and there it is. The little yellow clock on your photo. Away. As if you'd wandered off to another postcode.
So how long does it actually take, why is it so eager, and can you make it stop? Short answers: about five minutes, because it only watches your input, and sort of but not through a setting. Here's the longer version.
How long is the Teams away timer?
Microsoft Teams sets your status to Away after about five minutes of inactivity on your device. "Inactivity" means Teams has stopped seeing mouse or keyboard input. It will also switch you to Away straight away if your computer locks or goes to sleep, which is often what catches people first, well before the five minutes are up.
That yellow clock badge on your profile picture is the Away, or Inactive, marker. Green is Available, yellow clock is Away. If you have ever searched for why your Teams "turns yellow", that is the moment we are talking about.
The key thing: Teams is not judging whether you are working. It is watching for input. No input, no green.
Why you can't just change the timer
This is the part people find genuinely annoying: there is no setting to change the five-minute timer. You can dig through every menu in Teams and you will not find a "mark me away after 30 minutes" slider. It simply isn't exposed.
What you can do is set your status manually, and that is worth knowing about even though it is only half a fix.
- Set yourself to Available. Click your profile picture, choose Available. Handy, but temporary. Once Teams stops seeing activity, it drifts back to Away on its own.
- Set a status duration. You can pick how long a chosen status lasts, for example "Available until tomorrow". This controls a custom status, not the underlying activity detection, so an idle machine can still pull you to Away underneath it.
- Set a custom message. Useful for telling people what you're doing, useless for keeping the dot green.
All of these rely on you remembering to do them, and none of them change the fact that Teams is really just looking for activity. Which points at the actual fix.
What actually keeps Teams green
If the automatic Away is driven by activity, then the reliable answer is to keep genuine activity happening while you are at your machine. Not to keep re-setting your status every five minutes like you're feeding a very needy tamagotchi.
The common workarounds people try are the same ones that go around for Slack, and they have the same catches. Leaving Teams open in the background does not help if there is no input. Nudging the mouse yourself works right up until you forget. A tiny cursor jiggle can be too faint to count reliably.
A steadier approach is controlled desktop clicking. You pick a safe area on your screen, somewhere a click does nothing, and let your computer make occasional clicks there while you read, think, or work in another app. It creates real input, in a place you chose, so Teams keeps seeing you as active without your cursor being dragged around. There is more on the wider question in how to stop Teams showing you as away.
Where Green Dotter fits
Green Dotter is a free desktop app for Mac and Windows that does exactly this. You select a screen area, then it makes occasional clicks there on a randomised schedule, so it is not a robotic metronome. You start it and stop it yourself, or set it to run for a fixed time.
It runs locally, no account, no cloud. Just controlled clicking in a defined spot, so your Teams presence is less likely to wander off to Away while you are genuinely at your desk. If keeping the machine itself awake is also part of the problem, there is a keep Teams status active rundown too.
FAQ
How long until Teams shows you as away?
Microsoft Teams sets your status to Away after about five minutes of inactivity on your device. It can also switch you to Away as soon as your computer locks or goes to sleep, whichever happens first.
Can I change the Teams away timer in settings?
No. Teams does not give you a setting to change the five-minute inactivity timer. You can set a custom status or a status duration, but the automatic Away is driven by whether Teams is still seeing activity on your device.
What does the yellow clock on my Teams photo mean?
The yellow clock badge means Away or Inactive. Teams shows it when it has not detected activity for a few minutes, or when your computer has locked, even if you are still nearby and working in another app.
How do I keep my Teams status green?
Setting your status to Available helps for a while, but it reverts once Teams stops seeing activity. The more reliable approach is to keep genuine desktop input happening while you are at your machine, for example controlled clicks in a safe area, so Teams keeps counting you as active.
A note on workplace policies: how you handle presence depends on your role, your tools, and your employer's policies. Before relying on any presence or automation tool, make sure you understand what is allowed on your work device.
Related: download the Mac auto clicker or the Windows auto clicker.