Confluence Page Properties Report Multiple Rows Review

You can technically put a multi-row table inside a single Page Properties macro. However, be warned: It is designed to read the first column as a "Header" and the second column as "Value."

By default, the Page Properties Report looks for the first Page Properties macro it finds on a page and turns it into one row. To get multiple rows, you have two primary methods:

To understand how to get multiple rows, you first have to understand the standard "handshake" between these two macros: confluence page properties report multiple rows

You must add a specific label (e.g., project-2024 ) to the page so the report knows where to look.

By mastering this, you can transform Confluence from a simple wiki into a powerful project management tool that keeps your team organized without jumping between dozens of tiny pages. You can technically put a multi-row table inside

To get in a Confluence Page Properties report from a single page, the most effective method is to use multiple Page Properties macros on that page. Each macro represents one row in your final report.

On your content page, give the Risks macro the ID risk-data and the Decisions macro the ID decision-data . By mastering this, you can transform Confluence from

Give each macro a unique "ID" in the macro settings if you want to report on them separately, though usually, the report will simply stack them. Method 2: The Multi-Row Table (The Legacy Way)

If you have a page that tracks both "Risks" and "Decisions," you might want two different reports on your dashboard.