What is Slack Do Not Disturb?
Quick Definition
Slack Do Not Disturb (DND) is a feature that pauses notifications without changing your presence status. When DND is active, you won't receive alerts, but teammates can still see you as active and choose to send urgent messages.
Understanding Slack Do Not Disturb
Do Not Disturb in Slack is an independent system that runs parallel to presence, not a replacement for it. Presence controls your green or away dot; DND controls whether notifications reach you. This means four distinct states are possible: active with DND off, meaning available and receiving alerts; active with DND on, meaning online but silenced; away with DND off, meaning inactive but alerts enabled; and away with DND on, meaning both offline and silenced. Understanding this distinction matters because teammates frequently confuse the two systems. A colleague with DND enabled may show a green dot but not respond for hours because their notifications are paused, while someone marked away might reply instantly from their phone because DND is off and they received the notification. The visual indicator for DND is a small Z icon overlaid on the presence dot. When you see a green dot with a Z, the person is actively using Slack but has notifications paused. When you see a hollow circle with a Z, the person is both away and silenced. The Z appears next to the profile picture in the sidebar, in channel member lists, and on profile cards. Activating DND is straightforward. You can click your profile picture and select Pause notifications, then choose a duration from the preset options or type a custom time. Alternatively, the keyboard shortcut on desktop, which varies by platform, provides quick access. You can also use the slash command /dnd followed by a duration, such as /dnd 2 hours. Each of these methods activates DND immediately for the specified duration, after which notifications resume automatically. DND schedule configuration allows you to define recurring quiet hours that activate automatically without manual intervention each day. The most common setup is an overnight window, such as 6 PM to 8 AM on weeknights. Newer Slack versions support per-day-of-week schedules, so you can set different quiet hours for weekdays versus weekends or disable DND entirely on certain days. Some Slack plans support calendar integrations that automatically pause notifications during calendar events. This integration is particularly useful for people who attend many meetings because it eliminates the need to remember to enable and disable DND around each meeting. The urgent message override is an important safety valve in Slack's DND system. When someone sends a message to a person with DND enabled, Slack displays a prompt asking whether they want to notify the person anyway, explaining that notifications are currently paused. If the sender clicks through, the message is delivered with a notification that bypasses DND. This design preserves the ability to reach people for genuinely urgent matters while protecting them from routine interruptions during focus time. The override is intentionally friction-laden because it requires an extra click and an explicit decision, which discourages casual use and ensures that most messages respect the DND boundary. DND interacts with several other Slack features in ways worth understanding. Slack threads behave normally during DND: messages are still delivered to threads you are following, but you do not receive notifications about them until DND ends. Channel mentions using @here and @channel are also silenced by DND, though they appear as unread when you return. Huddles, Slack's audio feature, will not ring you when DND is active. Scheduled messages sent during your DND window are delivered but do not trigger notifications. When DND ends, Slack does not flood you with a backlog of missed notifications. Instead, it simply resumes normal notification behavior for new activity. Any messages that arrived during DND appear as unread in your sidebar but do not generate retroactive alerts. For full control over your availability signals, DND and presence scheduling work best together. DND manages when you are interrupted by notifications, while presence scheduling manages when teammates see you as reachable via the green dot. Using both in tandem lets you appear available during work hours, signaling that messages can be sent, while DND during focus blocks ensures that notifications do not break your concentration. This combination is especially effective for knowledge workers who need to protect blocks of deep work without creating the impression that they have left for the day.
Key Points
- Pauses all Slack notifications without affecting your presence status (green or away dot)
- Shows a Z icon overlaid on your profile picture when DND is active
- Can be scheduled for automatic recurring activation during quiet hours
- Teammates can override DND for urgent messages through an explicit prompt
- Different from away status: DND controls interruptions while presence controls visibility
- Supports per-day-of-week scheduling for different quiet hours on different days
- Silences @here and @channel mentions, huddle rings, and thread notifications
- Can be activated instantly via profile menu, keyboard shortcut, or /dnd slash command
Examples
Focus time
You enable DND for 2 hours while writing a proposal. Your green dot stays active as long as you interact with Slack periodically, but no notifications interrupt your work. Teammates see the Z icon and know you are in focus mode.
After-hours schedule
You set DND from 6pm to 9am on weekdays and all day on weekends. Messages sent during those hours are delivered silently. You can still check Slack voluntarily, but nothing pings or buzzes until your scheduled hours resume.
During a presentation
Before presenting to a client, you activate DND for 90 minutes using the /dnd 90 minutes slash command. No Slack notifications appear on your screen during the presentation. When the timer expires, notifications resume automatically without you needing to remember to turn them back on.
Urgent message override
A teammate needs to reach you about a production incident while your DND is active. They send a message and see a prompt explaining your notifications are paused, with an option to notify you anyway. They click through, and you receive the notification despite DND being on.
Calendar-synced DND
Your Slack is integrated with Google Calendar. When a 60-minute meeting starts, Slack automatically enables DND for the duration of the event. When the meeting ends, DND disables and normal notifications resume, all without any manual intervention.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Slack Do Not Disturb make me appear away?
Can teammates still message me during Slack Do Not Disturb?
How is DND different from setting myself away?
Can I schedule Slack Do Not Disturb to turn on automatically?
Does Slack Do Not Disturb silence all types of notifications?
What happens to notifications I missed during DND?
How Idle Pilot Helps
While Slack's Do Not Disturb handles notifications, Idle Pilot handles presence. You can use both together for complete control over your availability signals: DND to pause notifications during focus time so you are not interrupted, and Idle Pilot to maintain your active green dot during work hours so teammates know you are reachable. This combination lets you protect deep work without creating the impression that you have left for the day.
Try Idle Pilot freeRelated Terms
Slack presence is the indicator (green or yellow dot) next to your name showing whether you're currently active or away in Slack. It's automatically determined by Slack based on your recent activity and connection status.
Slack active status is the presence indicator (solid green dot) that appears next to your name when Slack detects recent activity. It signals to teammates that you're currently available and likely to respond.
Slack auto-away is the automatic system that switches your presence status from active (green) to away (yellow) after a period of inactivity. Slack typically triggers this after approximately 10 minutes with no interaction. When auto-away triggers, your profile shows a hollow circle (or yellow dot on some interfaces) instead of the solid green dot, signaling to teammates that you may not respond immediately.
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