Asynchronous Planning Poker in Jira: Estimate Issues Without More Meetings
Estimate Jira issues with fewer meetings. Learn how asynchronous Planning Poker works and why Async Poker for Jira is great for remote teams.

Agile teams still need estimates. This did not change.
But the way how teams estimate changed a lot. Many teams are remote now. Developers work from different countries, different time zones, and different schedules. Product owners want story point estimates faster, but developers also need time to read Jira issues properly.
This is where asynchronous Planning Poker in Jira becomes very useful.
Instead of asking everyone to join one more meeting, the team can estimate Jira issues when they have time. People can read the issue, check comments, think about risks, vote privately, and continue their work. Later, the moderator reviews the results and discusses only issues where it is really needed.
For me, this is the main idea: estimation should not always require a meeting.
And if your team already works in Jira, the estimation should also happen close to Jira. Not in a spreadsheet. Not in a random poker room. Not in a tool where you copy links manually.
This is why Async Poker for Jira is a strong choice for teams who want to estimate asynchronously, reduce meetings, and still keep the estimation process structured.
What Is Asynchronous Planning Poker?
Asynchronous Planning Poker is an Agile estimation method where team members estimate Jira issues without joining the same live meeting.
In classic Planning Poker, everyone joins a call, looks at one issue, selects a card, and then estimates are revealed. This can work well, but only when the team can easily meet at the same time.
In asynchronous Planning Poker, the process is different:
- The moderator creates an estimation game.
- Jira issues are added to the game.
- Participants are invited.
- Each person estimates when they have time.
- Votes stay hidden until review.
- The moderator reveals and reviews estimates.
- The final estimate is saved back to Jira.
This gives the team more freedom. A developer can estimate in the morning. Another developer can estimate after lunch. Someone in another time zone can estimate later. The team still works together, but without forcing everybody into the same meeting.
Why Jira Teams Need Async Estimation
Jira teams usually do not have a problem with "how to create more meetings."
They have the opposite problem.
Too many meetings. Too much context switching. Too many calls where half of the team is waiting while one or two people discuss details.
Planning Poker can also become like this. The team opens a Jira issue, reads it quickly, votes, discusses, then moves to the next one. Sometimes this is useful. But sometimes the team spends one hour estimating issues that could be estimated asynchronously.
This is especially painful for:
- remote Agile teams;
- distributed Scrum teams;
- developers in different time zones;
- teams with many backlog issues;
- teams that need more focus time;
- teams where people prefer written communication first.
Asynchronous estimation helps because people can think before they vote. They can read the Jira issue properly. They can check comments, attachments, acceptance criteria, linked issues, or technical notes.
This makes the estimate more thoughtful.
The Problem With Classic Planning Poker
Classic Planning Poker is not bad. It still has a place, especially when teams use a live-session tool like Sync Poker for Jira.
But for many Jira teams, it creates several problems.
| Problem | What usually happens |
|---|---|
| Hard to schedule | Everyone must be free at the same time |
| Too many meetings | Estimation becomes another long call |
| Fast opinions dominate | Senior or louder people can influence others |
| Not enough time to think | People vote quickly because the meeting is running |
| Context gets lost | Reasons behind estimates are not always written |
| Remote teams suffer more | Time zones make live sessions harder |
The biggest issue for me is speed.
In a meeting, people often estimate too fast. They see the Jira issue, read the title, maybe scan description, and then vote. But good estimation needs more than this.
Sometimes you need to check previous work. Sometimes you need to understand technical risk. Sometimes you need to ask if the acceptance criteria are clear.
Async estimation gives this space.
How Asynchronous Planning Poker Works in Jira
A good asynchronous estimation process in Jira can look like this:
- Product owner or moderator prepares Jira issues.
- The moderator creates an async estimation game.
- Issues are added from Jira backlog, board, sprint, or selected items.
- Team members get notified.
- Each participant reviews the issues and votes privately.
- Participants can add comments or reasoning.
- The moderator reviews the results.
- Only unclear or controversial issues are discussed.
- Final estimates are saved back to Jira.
This process is simple, but powerful.
The team does not need to discuss every issue live. If everyone estimates an issue as 5, maybe there is nothing to discuss. But if one person votes 3 and another person votes 13, this is a useful signal.
It means there is probably missing information, hidden complexity, or different understanding.
That is exactly where discussion is valuable.
Why Async Poker for Jira Is Better Than a Generic Poker Room
There are many Planning Poker tools. Some are simple and nice for quick live sessions. But for Jira teams, a generic poker room is often not enough.
Why?
Because Jira estimation is not only about voting cards.
A real Jira estimation workflow needs:
- Jira issue context;
- hidden estimates;
- comments and reasoning;
- participants;
- progress tracking;
- review flow;
- final estimate;
- notifications;
- deadline reminders;
- connection back to Jira.
If you use a generic poker tool, you often need to copy Jira links manually, open Jira in another tab, update final estimates yourself, and remind people outside the tool.
This is extra work.
Async Poker for Jira is different because it is made for asynchronous estimation inside the Jira workflow. It is not just "cards on a screen." It helps the team move through the full estimation process.
For Jira teams, this is the big advantage.
Async Poker for Jira Is Async by Design
Some Planning Poker tools are mostly built for live sessions. Async mode, if it exists, feels like an extra feature.
But Async Poker for Jira is built around asynchronous estimation.
This matters because async estimation is not only "let people vote later." A real async process needs structure.
The team needs to know:
- when the game started;
- who still needs to vote;
- which issues were added;
- when the deadline is coming;
- when the game moves to review;
- when the game is finished;
- what final estimate was selected.
Without this structure, async estimation becomes messy. People forget to vote. Moderator needs to chase everyone. Final estimates are delayed.
Async Poker for Jira solves this problem better because the workflow is designed for async work from the beginning.
Estimation Should Stay Close to Jira Issues
When developers estimate, they need context.
A Jira issue title is not enough. The team may need:
- description;
- acceptance criteria;
- comments;
- attachments;
- linked issues;
- design links;
- technical notes;
- previous discussion;
- product owner clarification.
If estimation happens outside Jira, people lose this context. They jump between tools, copy links, ask questions in another chat, and then somebody updates the estimate manually.
This is not ideal.
With Async Poker for Jira, estimation stays connected with Jira issues. The team can estimate the work they already use in their daily process.
This makes estimation easier, cleaner, and more natural for Jira teams.

Hidden Votes Help Reduce Estimation Bias
One big reason why Planning Poker exists is to reduce bias.
If one person says "this is easy" before voting, other people may vote lower. If a senior developer gives an opinion too early, junior developers may follow it. Not because they agree, but because they do not want to argue.
Hidden votes help avoid this.
In asynchronous Planning Poker, hidden votes are even more useful. People estimate independently and have more time to think. They can make their own judgment before seeing what others voted.
This is important because different estimates are not a failure.
Different estimates are information.
If one developer votes 3 and another votes 13, the team just discovered something important. Maybe there is hidden technical risk. Maybe the Jira issue is unclear. Maybe one person knows about a dependency that others missed.
Async Poker for Jira helps make these differences visible, so the team can discuss the right things.

Written Reasoning Makes Estimates More Useful
A story point estimate without reasoning can be hard to understand later.
Someone may ask after two weeks:
"Why did we estimate this issue as 8?"
And nobody remembers.
Async estimation is better for written reasoning. People can add short comments when they vote, especially when they are unsure or when their estimate is different.
For example:
- "I voted 5 because backend is clear, but frontend has some unknowns."
- "I voted 13 because migration may be needed."
- "I think this is 3 if design is already final."
- "Need clarification before final estimate."
- "There is dependency on another team."
This is very useful for the moderator. It is also useful for the team later, when implementation starts.
Good estimation is not only a number. It is also the thinking behind the number. If your team wants a refresher on the numbers themselves, this guide to story points is a useful companion.
Notifications Make Async Estimation Actually Work
This is one of the most important parts.
In asynchronous Planning Poker, notifications are not a small feature. They are one of the main reasons why async estimation works in real teams.
In a live estimation meeting, everybody is already in the room. But in async estimation, people vote at different times. One developer votes in the morning, another after lunch, and someone else maybe tomorrow.
Without notifications, the game can simply stop.
Not because people are lazy. Not because they do not care. They are just busy. They are working on tickets, answering questions, reviewing pull requests, joining other meetings.
Then the moderator becomes a human reminder bot:
"Please vote."
"Please check the game."
"Can you estimate these issues?"
"Deadline is coming."
This is exactly what a good async tool should reduce.
That is why Async Poker for Jira has a very practical advantage: it supports both Slack notifications and email notifications.
Slack Notifications in Async Poker for Jira
Slack is where many teams already work during the day. So for async estimation, Slack notifications are very useful.
Async Poker for Jira supports Slack notifications for important game events, including:
- game started;
- game moved to reviewing;
- game finished;
- all issues estimated;
- issues added;
- participants added;
- game deadline reminder.

This is important because asynchronous estimation has more than one step.
It is not only "please vote."
Sometimes the team needs to know that a game started. Sometimes new Jira issues were added. Sometimes the moderator should know that all issues are estimated. Sometimes participants need a deadline reminder. Sometimes the team should see that the game moved to reviewing or finished.
Slack delivery is also flexible. Notifications can be sent as:
- channel message;
- thread reply;
- direct message.
This is a strong detail.
Not every notification should create the same noise. A game started message can be good in a project channel. Updates can be better as thread replies, so the channel stays clean. Deadline reminders can be better as direct messages, especially when only one person still needs to estimate.
For me, this makes Async Poker for Jira feel more like a real workflow tool, not just a voting screen.
Email Notifications in Async Poker for Jira
Email is also important.
Not every company lives fully in Slack. Some teams check email more reliably. Some companies have stricter communication habits. Some people are not always active in Slack.
Async Poker for Jira supports email notifications for events like:
- game started;
- new participants added to a playing game;
- issues added;
- participant finished estimating;
- game deadline reminder.

This helps the estimation process continue even if people are not watching the Jira app all the time.
For example, when a game starts, participants can be informed. When new issues are added, they know there is more work to estimate. When the deadline is close, they get a reminder. When a participant finishes estimating, the moderator can understand progress.

This is not only "notification feature."
This is part of the async estimation workflow.
Because async estimation only works when people actually participate.
Async Poker for Jira vs Simple Planning Poker Tools
Here is a simple comparison.
| Feature | Async Poker for Jira | Simple Planning Poker Tool |
|---|---|---|
| Built for Jira teams | Yes | Not always |
| Async-first workflow | Yes | Often limited |
| Jira issue context | Connected with Jira | Often manual copy-paste |
| Hidden estimates | Yes | Usually yes |
| Written reasoning | Good for async review | Often limited |
| Slack notifications | Game started, reviewing, finished, issues added, participants added, deadline reminders, and more | Often missing or basic |
| Email notifications | Game started, issues added, participants added, participant finished estimating, deadline reminders | Often missing or limited |
| Slack delivery options | Channel message, thread reply, direct message | Usually not flexible |
| Final estimate workflow | Connected with Jira process | Often manual |
| Best for | Jira teams estimating asynchronously | Quick one-time sessions |
A simple Planning Poker tool can be okay for a small live session.
But if your team uses Jira every day and wants regular asynchronous estimation, then Async Poker for Jira is a better fit.
It supports the real process, not only the voting moment.
Asynchronous Planning Poker vs Live Planning Poker
Asynchronous Planning Poker and live Planning Poker are not enemies.
They solve different problems.
| Feature | Asynchronous Planning Poker | Live Planning Poker |
|---|---|---|
| Requires meeting | No | Yes |
| Time zone friendly | Yes | Not always |
| Good for remote teams | Very good | Sometimes difficult |
| Independent thinking | Stronger | Can be influenced |
| Immediate discussion | Not always | Yes |
| Written reasoning | Better | Often weaker |
| Focus time friendly | Yes | No |
| Best for | Prepared backlog estimation | Complex issues needing live talk |
I would not say that async estimation should replace every meeting.
Better approach is this:
Use Async Poker for Jira to estimate most issues asynchronously. Then discuss only the issues where votes are very different, requirements are unclear, or the final estimate needs team discussion.
This gives the team the best of both worlds: fewer meetings, but still good collaboration.
For teams that prefer live estimation sessions, Sync Poker for Jira can be better. But for distributed teams, remote teams, or teams who want to reduce meetings, Async Poker for Jira is usually more practical.
When Async Poker for Jira Works Best
Async Poker for Jira is especially useful when:
- your team works in Jira every day;
- you want fewer estimation meetings;
- your team is remote or hybrid;
- developers are in different time zones;
- you have many backlog issues to estimate;
- people need time to read before voting;
- you want written explanations, not only numbers;
- you want Slack or email reminders;
- the moderator does not want to chase everyone manually;
- final estimates should stay connected with Jira.
It is also useful for quieter team members.
In live meetings, some people do not speak much. In async estimation, they can give their estimate and explanation without pressure. This can make estimation more balanced.
Common Mistakes With Asynchronous Estimation
Async estimation is powerful, but it still needs good process.
1. Starting With Poor Jira Issues
If the Jira issue is unclear, async estimation will not magically fix it.
Before starting the game, make sure important issues have enough context:
- clear description;
- acceptance criteria;
- designs or links;
- dependencies;
- known risks.
The better the issue, the better the estimate.
2. No Deadline
If there is no deadline, people will vote "later."
And later often means never.
Use a clear estimation window. For many teams, 24-48 hours is enough. For teams in very different time zones, it can be longer.
3. No Notifications
This is a big mistake.
Async estimation without notifications is too easy to forget. People need reminders when a game starts, when issues are added, and when deadline is coming.
This is why Slack and email notifications in Async Poker for Jira are so important.
4. Discussing Every Issue Again
If you estimate asynchronously and then discuss every issue again in a meeting, you lose the main benefit.
Better discuss only:
- issues with big estimate differences;
- unclear issues;
- high-risk issues;
- issues where people added questions;
- issues where final estimate is not obvious.
5. Using a Tool Outside Jira
If your team works in Jira, but estimation happens somewhere else, you create extra work.
People need to copy links, update estimates manually, and search for context.
For Jira teams, estimation should stay close to Jira.
Best Practices for Asynchronous Planning Poker in Jira
Here are some simple practices that make async estimation better.
Prepare the Backlog First
Do not estimate completely unclear issues.
A little preparation saves a lot of confusion later.
Use Hidden Votes
Hidden votes help people think independently. This is one of the strongest parts of Planning Poker.
Ask for Comments on Unclear Estimates
Not every vote needs a long explanation. But if someone votes much higher or lower than others, a short comment is very useful.
Use Slack and Email Notifications
Async does not mean silent.
Use notifications to keep the game moving without manual chasing.
Review Only Important Differences
If all estimates are close, the moderator can often choose final estimate quickly.
If estimates are very different, this is where discussion is useful.
Save Final Estimates Back to Jira
The final estimate should not stay only in the poker tool. It should be part of the Jira workflow, because planning continues in Jira.

For broader estimation context, you can also compare async Planning Poker with other methods like T-shirt sizing in Agile.
Who Should Use Asynchronous Planning Poker?
Asynchronous Planning Poker is good for:
- Scrum teams;
- Kanban teams;
- remote Agile teams;
- distributed development teams;
- Jira teams with many backlog items;
- teams that want fewer meetings;
- teams that prefer written communication;
- teams where developers need focus time;
- product teams that want better estimation history.
It is not only for remote teams.
Even teams in the same office can benefit from async estimation. Sometimes people simply need more time to think. Sometimes the team does not need another meeting.
Sometimes the best meeting is the meeting you do not need to have.
Is Asynchronous Planning Poker Accurate?
Yes, it can be accurate.
In some cases, it can even be better than live estimation because people have more time to read and think.
But accuracy depends on the process.
Async estimation works best when:
- Jira issues are prepared;
- participants understand the goal;
- votes are hidden;
- people can add comments;
- there is a deadline;
- moderator reviews differences;
- final estimate is saved properly.
If the team just votes randomly, no tool will help.
But with good process and Async Poker for Jira, asynchronous estimation can be very effective.
Does Async Estimation Replace Meetings?
Not completely.
And it does not need to.
Async estimation should reduce unnecessary meetings, not remove all human discussion.
Some issues still need conversation. Some requirements are too unclear. Some estimates are too different. Some technical decisions need real discussion.
But instead of spending one hour estimating 20 issues, the team can estimate them asynchronously and discuss only the 3 or 4 issues that really need attention.
This is better use of everyone's time.
Why I Would Choose Async Poker for Jira
If my team uses Jira and wants asynchronous estimation, I would choose Async Poker for Jira because it supports the real workflow.
The main reasons are:
- it is made for async estimation;
- it works with Jira issues;
- it supports hidden estimates;
- it supports written reasoning;
- it has a review flow;
- it supports Slack notifications;
- it supports email notifications;
- it helps with deadline reminders;
- it reduces manual chasing;
- it keeps estimation close to Jira.
For me, the notification part is especially important.
Many tools can collect votes. But not every tool helps the team actually finish estimation.
Async Poker for Jira can notify people when a game starts, when issues are added, when participants are added, when deadline is coming, when all issues are estimated, when the game moves to reviewing, and when the game is finished.
This is what makes it a practical async estimation workflow, not only a card voting tool.
FAQ About Asynchronous Planning Poker in Jira
What is asynchronous Planning Poker in Jira?
Asynchronous Planning Poker in Jira is an Agile estimation process where team members estimate Jira issues at different times, without joining the same live meeting. Votes are usually hidden until review, and the final estimate can be saved back to Jira.
How is asynchronous Planning Poker different from normal Planning Poker?
Normal Planning Poker usually happens in a live meeting. Asynchronous Planning Poker lets people vote when they have time. This is better for remote teams, distributed teams, and teams who want fewer meetings.
Is Async Poker for Jira good for remote teams?
Yes. Async Poker for Jira is especially useful for remote and distributed teams because participants can estimate in their own time and use Slack or email notifications to stay updated.
Why are Slack notifications important for async estimation?
Slack notifications help the team know when a game starts, when issues are added, when deadline is coming, when the game moves to reviewing, and when the game is finished. Without notifications, async games can be forgotten.
What Slack notification types does Async Poker for Jira support?
Async Poker for Jira supports Slack notifications for game started, game moved to reviewing, game finished, all issues estimated, issues added, participants added, and game deadline reminder.
What Slack delivery types are available?
Slack notifications can be delivered as a channel message, thread reply, or direct message. This helps teams control noise and send the right notification to the right place.
What email notifications does Async Poker for Jira support?
Async Poker for Jira supports email notifications for game started, new participants added to a playing game, issues added, participant finished estimating, and game deadline reminder.
Does asynchronous Planning Poker replace refinement meetings?
Not always. It can reduce meeting time, but some issues still need discussion. A good process is to estimate asynchronously first, then discuss only unclear or controversial issues.
How long should asynchronous estimation stay open?
For many teams, 24-48 hours works well. For teams with large time zone differences, the estimation window can be longer.
Is asynchronous Planning Poker less accurate?
No. It can be accurate when Jira issues are clear, votes are hidden, people can add reasoning, and the moderator reviews differences before final estimate.
Final Thoughts
Asynchronous Planning Poker is not just a remote team workaround. It is a better way to estimate when the team wants fewer meetings, more focus, and better written context.
Classic Planning Poker still has its place. Sometimes live discussion is needed. But many Jira issues do not need a full meeting. They need good context, independent estimates, and a clear review process.
This is why Async Poker for Jira is a strong choice for Jira teams.
It keeps estimation close to Jira, supports hidden votes, written reasoning, review flow, Slack notifications, email notifications, deadline reminders, and final estimation workflow.
For me, this is the practical way to estimate in modern Agile teams:
Do not stop everybody for one more meeting when the team can estimate better in their own time.
Want to estimate Jira issues without one more meeting? Try Async Poker for Jira and let your team vote when they have time, with Slack and email notifications to keep the game moving.


