Microsoft Teams Location Prompts on macOS
Microsoft has confirmed user reports that the Teams team collaboration app is displaying non-dismissible location prompts on some macOS systems. According to affected Teams users, these non-dismissible prompts have been appearing on macOS devices over the past week, asking for permission to use their location "for things like GPS and Wi-Fi."
Affected users have reported that the prompts continue to appear even after clicking "Don't Allow" multiple times. One user stated, "I have been getting this message on macOS since May 14, 2026. At first, it would go away after the first click of 'Don't Allow,' today, I have clicked 'Don't Allow' at least twenty times in a row, and the dialog keeps coming right back."
Microsoft's Response
Microsoft acknowledged this known issue in a new incident report (TM1315837) and blamed it on a recent macOS security update that prevents the operating system from retaining users' location-permission selections. The company stated, "We've identified that a recent macOS security update doesn't store users' location permission selections for Teams as expected, resulting in repeated location prompts."
Microsoft is working with Apple to better understand the change and identify a resolution. In parallel, the company is investigating a potential fix within Teams to mitigate the repeated prompts. The issue affects only certain Microsoft Teams users on Mac who have enabled location access in their Teams settings.
Workaround
Until a fix is available, impacted users are advised to work around the issue by manually enabling location access for Microsoft Teams within macOS settings. To do that, go to System Settings > Privacy & Security > Location Services, locate "Microsoft Teams" and "Microsoft Teams ModuleHost," toggle them on and off, then set them back to the desired setting.
Incident Details
Microsoft has yet to share which regions are affected and how many users are impacted by this incident. However, the company says the first reports surfaced on May 11. Microsoft has flagged this incident as an advisory, a label commonly used to describe service issues involving limited scope or impact.
In recent weeks, Microsoft has also addressed other issues with the Teams app, including a known issue that prevents some Microsoft Teams Free users from chatting and calling others, and a bug introduced by a recent Microsoft Edge browser update that blocked Windows users from joining Teams meetings.
- Microsoft began rolling out a fix for a known issue that prevents some Microsoft Teams Free users from chatting and calling others.
- The company addressed another issue blocking Windows users from joining Teams meetings due to a bug introduced by a recent Microsoft Edge browser update.
- Microsoft reverted a service update blocking some customers from launching the Teams desktop client.
For more information on the incident, users can refer to Microsoft's incident report (TM1315837). Additionally, users can download a guide on the 6 surfaces you actually need to validate for automated pentesting tools.
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Read more about the incident and Microsoft's response.
Source: BleepingComputer