See your project‘s history with the Activity View
Projects are a great way to keep your tasks organized on GitHub, and they‘re especially useful when working with a team. To make it easier to keep track of what‘s…
Projects are a great way to keep your tasks organized on GitHub, and they‘re especially useful when working with a team. To make it easier to keep track of what‘s going on in a Project with lots of people, we‘re introducing the new Project Activity view, a way for you to view a history of all the activity that‘s happened in your project.

If you find that a particular card isn‘t where you left it, it could be because one of your teammates renamed it or moved it to a different column. The Project Activity view can help you track down these changes, so you can figure out exactly what‘s changed since the last time you looked at your Project.
Since we‘ve only recently started recording activity for this feature, your project‘s activity history won‘t go back much before January 27th, 2017. However, you‘ll be able to see any changes to your project after that date. It‘s time to start making history!
In the meantime, you‘re welcome to drop any questions, comments, or feedback about Project Activity into our help form.
Written by
Related posts
What’s coming to our GitHub Actions 2026 security roadmap
A look at GitHub Actions’ 2026 roadmap, outlining how secure defaults, policy controls, and CI/CD observability harden the software supply chain end to end.
Updates to GitHub Copilot interaction data usage policy
From April 24 onward, interaction data—specifically inputs, outputs, code snippets, and associated context—from Copilot Free, Pro, and Pro+ users will be used to train and improve our AI models unless they opt out.
GitHub availability report: February 2026
In February, we experienced six incidents that resulted in degraded performance across GitHub services.