Help Center / Tasks and task boards /
Task boards overview
Task boards group tasks together under a shared set of columns, with their own views, filters, and configuration. Each board operates independently, so different workflows can run side by side within the same project or across your workspace.
Project-scoped and standalone boards
Task boards can belong to a specific project or exist as standalone boards outside of any project. Project-scoped boards organise tasks within that project, so a design project might have a "Design Pipeline" board while a development project has a "Sprint Board". Standalone boards collect tasks from across your workspace, which is useful for cross-project workflows like a company-wide "Marketing Calendar" or "Bug Triage" board.
Multiple boards per project
A single project can have multiple task boards, each with its own columns and views. One board might track design phases while another tracks development sprints, and both exist within the same project. Tasks belong to one board at a time, and moving a task between boards is straightforward.
Board views
Each task board supports all five views: board (Kanban columns), list (table), calendar, timeline, and agenda. Switching between views shows the same set of tasks in a different layout. Filters applied to one view persist when switching to another, so a filtered board view stays filtered in list or calendar view too.
Creating boards from templates
Task boards can be created from templates that preserve column structure, task groups, and board settings. Applying a board template sets up the columns and configuration in one step, so repeatable workflows don't need to be rebuilt each time a new board is created.
Multiple boards per project mean different workflows can run in parallel, each with their own columns and views, without interfering with each other.