ClickUp Automations Not Working? Complete Troubleshooting Guide 2026
Troubleshooting Guide · ClickUp Automations
ClickUp automations are supposed to eliminate repetitive work — but when they stop firing, they create a different kind of problem: you can’t trust your workflow. Tasks pile up in wrong statuses, notifications stop, and your team loses confidence in the tool. This guide covers every common ClickUp automation failure mode in 2026, with specific diagnostic steps and fixes for each one.
Why ClickUp Automations Stop Working (The Big Picture)
Before diving into specific errors, it helps to understand how ClickUp automations work under the hood. Every automation has three parts: a trigger (the event that starts it), optional conditions (filters that decide whether to proceed), and actions (what happens when triggered). Failures occur in all three layers, and the symptom you see on the surface doesn’t always tell you which layer is broken.
The second thing to know: ClickUp automations count against a monthly automation run limit based on your plan. If you hit the limit, all automations stop running until the month resets — and ClickUp doesn’t send you a prominent warning when this happens. This is the single most common cause of “my automations just stopped working” overnight.
📊 ClickUp Automation Run Limits by Plan (2026)
| Plan | Monthly Automation Runs | External Integrations |
|---|---|---|
| Free Forever | 100 runs/month | ❌ Not included |
| Unlimited | 1,000 runs/month | ❌ Not included |
| Business | 10,000 runs/month | ✅ Slack, email, webhooks |
| Business Plus | 25,000 runs/month | ✅ All integrations |
| Enterprise | Unlimited | ✅ All integrations |
Step 1: Check Your Automation Run Count First
Before troubleshooting individual automations, always check if you’ve hit your monthly run limit. In ClickUp, go to Settings → Automations (at the workspace level). At the top of the page you’ll see your current month’s automation usage: “X of Y runs used”. If this shows you’ve used 100% of your runs, all automations are paused until the next billing cycle.
If you’re hitting the limit regularly, you have three options: upgrade your plan for more runs, audit your automations to find inefficient ones consuming too many runs, or use ClickUp Brain AI to consolidate multiple simple automations into fewer, more targeted ones.
Problem 1: Automation Trigger Not Firing
Symptom: You perform the trigger action (change a status, move a task, add a due date) but the automation doesn’t execute. No errors appear anywhere.
Diagnostic Step: Check the Automation Activity Log
Every ClickUp automation has an activity log. Open the automation rule, and look for the “Activity” or “History” tab. This shows every time the trigger fired and what happened. If the log shows no recent activity after you triggered it, the trigger itself isn’t registering the event.
Common Cause 1: Wrong Space/Folder/List Scope
ClickUp automations have a scope — they only run on tasks within the Space, Folder, or List where the automation is configured. If you created the automation in “Space A” but are triggering it in “List B” inside “Space C”, it won’t fire. Fix: Open the automation settings and confirm the scope indicator at the top matches the location where you’re expecting it to run. If needed, recreate the automation at the correct level or add it to the specific List where you need it.
Common Cause 2: Trigger Conditions Are Too Restrictive
Many automation triggers include optional condition filters — for example, “When status changes to Done AND priority is Urgent”. If the task doesn’t meet ALL conditions, the trigger won’t fire. Fix: Edit the automation and review each condition. Remove conditions that might be filtering out legitimate trigger events. Test with a simple version of the rule first (no conditions), then add conditions back one at a time to identify which one is blocking it.
Common Cause 3: Automation Is Disabled
This sounds obvious, but it’s worth checking. In the automation list for your Space/Folder/List, look at the toggle on the right side of each automation. A grey/off toggle means the automation is paused. Fix: Click the toggle to enable it. Also check if there’s a workspace-level “pause all automations” setting that an admin may have enabled.
Problem 2: Trigger Fires But Action Doesn’t Execute
Symptom: The activity log shows the trigger fired, but the action (assign a user, change status, send notification) didn’t happen.
Common Cause 1: Permission Issue on the Action
The automation runs under the context of the user who created it (or the workspace bot, depending on your plan). If the automation tries to assign a task to a user who isn’t a member of the list, or move a task to a folder the automation “user” doesn’t have access to, the action silently fails.
Fix: Check the error in the Activity Log — it often specifies “User does not have permission” or “Target list not found”. For assignment actions, ensure the target user is a member of the list with at least Member-level access. For move actions, verify the destination list exists and is accessible.
Common Cause 2: External Integration Not Connected
If your automation action involves an external service (Slack, email, webhook, GitHub), the integration must be actively connected. If the connection was revoked, expired, or the app was removed from your workspace, the action fails silently.
Fix: Go to Settings → Integrations and check the status of the relevant integration. Reconnect or re-authorize it if needed. For Slack specifically: if your Slack workspace was migrated to a different plan or if someone removed the ClickUp app from Slack, you’ll need to re-add it from the Slack App Directory and re-authorize in ClickUp.
Common Cause 3: Automation Action Conflicts with Another Automation
If two automations are both triggered by the same event and their actions conflict (one sets status to “In Review”, another sets it to “Done”), the last one to execute wins — and the result may look like one of them isn’t working.
Fix: Review all automations in the same scope for overlapping triggers. Consolidate conflicting automations or add conditions to each one to ensure they’re mutually exclusive (e.g., “only run if assignee is X”).
Problem 3: Automation Runs Once Then Stops
Symptom: The automation works perfectly for the first few days, then stops firing. Or it fires once per task and then never again for the same task.
Common Cause: “Run Once Per Task” Setting
ClickUp automations have a setting that controls whether they can fire multiple times for the same task, or only once. If “Run only once per task” is enabled, the automation will fire the first time the trigger condition is met, then ignore future triggers for that same task.
Fix: Open the automation rule settings (the gear/settings icon within the automation). Look for a “Run once per task” or “Frequency” setting and change it to “Run every time conditions are met” if you want repeating execution.
Common Cause: Status Change Loops (Automation Creates Its Own Trigger)
This is a subtle but common problem. You create an automation: “When status changes to Done → assign to QA team”. But the assignment action itself triggers another automation that changes the status, which triggers the original automation again. ClickUp detects this loop after a few cycles and pauses the automation to prevent infinite execution.
Fix: Add a condition to your automation that prevents re-triggering. For example, add the condition “Only if assignee is NOT QA team” to the status-change trigger, so the automation won’t fire after the assignment was already made.
Problem 4: Slack Notifications from ClickUp Automations Not Arriving
Symptom: The ClickUp automation for Slack is enabled and the activity log shows it “ran successfully”, but the Slack message never arrives in the channel.
Diagnostic Steps
First, check the ClickUp activity log for the specific automation execution. If it shows “Success” on the Slack action, the message was sent from ClickUp’s side — the issue is on the Slack side. If it shows an error, note the error message and follow the integration reconnection steps above.
In Slack, check if the ClickUp app is still installed and active (Settings → Manage Apps → ClickUp). Also verify the channel specified in the automation still exists — if it was renamed or archived, the message is posting to a channel that no longer exists under that name.
Fix for “Success” but no message: Disconnect and reconnect the Slack integration in ClickUp Settings → Integrations → Slack. Then update the automation with the freshly authorized connection. This refreshes the OAuth token and usually resolves delivery failures.
Problem 5: Date-Based Trigger Not Firing on Schedule
Symptom: You have an automation set to fire “1 day before due date” or “on due date” but it’s not triggering at the expected time.
Common Cause: Time Zone Mismatch
ClickUp evaluates date triggers based on the workspace time zone, not the individual user’s time zone. If the workspace is set to UTC but your team works in EST (UTC-5), a trigger set for “due date” fires at midnight UTC — which is 7pm the previous day in EST. Tasks may appear to trigger “early” or “late” depending on the gap.
Fix: Go to Settings → Workspace Settings → Time Zone and set it to your team’s primary working time zone. All date-based automations will then evaluate times in that zone.
Common Cause: Task Has No Due Date or Due Date Was Changed
If a task’s due date is removed after the automation trigger was registered, the scheduled execution gets cancelled. Similarly, if the due date is changed to a past date after an automation already “missed” it, the trigger won’t retroactively fire.
Fix: Ensure tasks have due dates set before the trigger window. If a due date changes, ClickUp re-evaluates the trigger — but only for future dates, not past ones.
Problem 6: Automation Works in Testing But Fails in Production
Symptom: When you manually click “Run” to test an automation rule, it works. But when the real trigger fires, it doesn’t execute correctly.
Cause: Manual test runs execute the automation in a slightly different context — they run immediately, bypass some condition checks, and may use the admin user’s permissions rather than the automation bot’s permissions. Conditions that fail in production often pass in test mode because of these differences.
Fix: Don’t rely solely on manual test runs. Create a test task that exactly replicates your real conditions — same list, same status, same assignee, same custom field values. Trigger it naturally (by changing the status manually, for example) and watch the activity log for that specific execution. This gives you a true production test.
🔍 ClickUp Automation Troubleshooting Checklist (Run in This Order)
- Check run count: Settings → Automations. Are you at 100% of your monthly limit?
- Check automation enabled: Is the toggle on (purple) for this specific automation?
- Check scope: Is the automation created in the same Space/Folder/List where you’re triggering it?
- Review the Activity Log: Did the trigger fire? Did the action succeed? What error appears?
- Review conditions: Are all conditions being met for your test task? Remove conditions and test.
- Check integrations: Settings → Integrations — is Slack/email/GitHub still connected?
- Check “run once per task”: Is this enabled? Does this automation need to repeat?
- Check for loops: Could another automation’s action be re-triggering this one?
- Check time zone: For date triggers — does the workspace time zone match your team’s?
- Test with a real trigger: Don’t rely on manual “Run” tests — use actual trigger events.
Advanced: Using ClickUp Brain AI to Diagnose Automation Issues
In 2026, ClickUp Brain (available on Business plan and above) can help diagnose automation problems. In the ClickUp AI chat, you can ask questions like “Why isn’t my automation firing for tasks in [List name]?” or “Show me all automations that trigger on status change to Done”. Brain can surface automation conflicts, suggest simplifications, and even write new automation logic for you.
For complex multi-step automations, Brain can also help you break them into simpler, more reliable sequences — which often fixes mysterious failures that occur because a chain of actions becomes too complex for a single automation to handle reliably.
When to Contact ClickUp Support
If you’ve gone through the entire checklist above and automations still aren’t working, it’s time to contact ClickUp support. Before reaching out, collect: the specific automation ID (found in the URL when editing the automation), screenshots of the activity log showing the failure, your workspace plan, and the exact trigger/action sequence. ClickUp support can access server-side logs that aren’t visible to users, which often reveals edge-case failures that don’t appear in the activity log.
Known issues are tracked in the ClickUp status page (clickup.com/status) — check there first to see if there’s an ongoing incident affecting automations broadly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did my ClickUp automations suddenly stop working?
The most common reason is hitting your monthly automation run limit. Check Settings → Automations to see your usage percentage. Other common causes: an integration was disconnected, someone disabled the automation, or a condition was added that’s now blocking execution. Check the activity log for the most recent executions to see where it broke.
How do I see why a specific ClickUp automation failed?
Open the automation rule and click the “Activity” or “History” tab. Each execution is listed with a timestamp, the task that triggered it, and whether it succeeded or failed. Click on a failed execution to see the specific error message. This log is your most reliable diagnostic tool.
Can ClickUp automations run on subtasks?
Yes, but you need to enable “Apply to subtasks” in the automation settings. This is a separate toggle that’s off by default. If you want your automation to apply to both tasks and their subtasks, enable this setting. If it’s off, the automation only fires for parent tasks.
Why does my ClickUp automation run but assign to the wrong person?
The “Assign to” action replaces the existing assignee by default. If you want to add an assignee without removing the current one, look for the “Add Assignee” option instead of “Set Assignee”. Also check if another automation is overriding your assignment — run a search for all automations with an “Assign” action in the same list.
How many automations can I have in ClickUp?
The number of automation rules you can create is not strictly limited on most plans — the limit is on monthly runs (executions), not on the number of rules. However, having hundreds of automation rules in a single Space can slow down the automation engine. Best practice is to keep automations organized and consolidate where possible.
📚 Related Reading on WorkManagement Hub
🔗 Official Resources & Further Reading
🎯 Expert Bottom Line
ClickUp automation failures almost always have a specific, findable cause. Start with the monthly run limit check — it’s the most common culprit for overnight failures. Then work through the checklist: automation enabled, correct scope, conditions met, integrations connected, no conflicting loops. The activity log is your best friend — 90% of issues can be diagnosed in under 5 minutes by reading the execution details carefully. For teams on Free or Unlimited plans, the run limit is the biggest constraint — consider upgrading to Business if automations are core to your workflow.