Minutes are a draft until someone formally approves them. The approval of meeting minutes is the step that turns a set of notes into the official record; confirmed by the group, typically through unanimous consent at the start of the next meeting. Most teams skip this step entirely, treating undiscussed drafts as fact, which works fine until a decision gets disputed and there's no evidence anyone agreed to it.
The process itself is short. Most of the confusion comes from not knowing who's supposed to do what, or using the wrong words to do it.
Who does what in the meeting minutes approval process
Three roles, each with a distinct job. Mixing them up is where most of the confusion in this process comes from.
The secretary drafts the minutes, distributes them ahead of the next meeting, and records any corrections once they're raised. The secretary doesn't need to have attended the meeting being approved. If the regular secretary was absent when the minutes were taken, a pro tem secretary fills in for that meeting, and the regular secretary can still run the approval process at the next one, since approval confirms accuracy of the record rather than personal participation.
The chair presides over the approval itself: asking whether there are corrections, handling them as they come up, and confirming once the group is satisfied that the minutes stand approved.
Everyone else in the room is responsible for having actually read the draft before the meeting. Approval is meant to take a couple of minutes, not turn into a fresh read-through, and that only works if people show up having already checked it.
A formal motion isn't actually required for this. Under Robert's Rules of Order, the standard and more efficient method is unanimous consent, which is faster precisely because it skips the motion-second-vote sequence when nobody objects.
Chair: "The minutes from [date] have been distributed. Are there any corrections?"
[pause for corrections, if any]
Chair: "If there are no further corrections, the minutes stand approved as distributed."
If a correction is raised, the chair confirms the change with the group, the secretary notes it, and the chair asks again whether there are further corrections before moving to approval. No vote is needed unless someone actually disputes a correction.
Some boards prefer a formal motion regardless, particularly where bylaws specify it or where a written record of who proposed and seconded the action matters.
In that case, the wording is direct:
"I move to approve the minutes from the [date] meeting as distributed."
or, if corrections were made:
"I move to approve the minutes from the [date] meeting as corrected."
Either way, the motion needs a second before the chair can call for a vote. Skipping the second is a common mistake. It doesn't usually get challenged in the moment, but it leaves a procedural gap in the record that can matter later if a decision from that meeting is ever disputed.
What counts as a correction in meeting minutes
Corrections fix factual errors in the record: a name spelled wrong, a vote count that doesn't match what actually happened, an action item that got missed entirely. They don't reopen the substance of what was decided.
A board member who voted against a motion can't use the correction process to argue the vote should have gone differently. That's not a correction, it's relitigating a decision that's already been made, and the approval step isn't the place for it. If someone genuinely believes the documented outcome is wrong (the vote count is off, not the result they wanted), that's a factual correction. If they just disagree with the outcome, that's a different conversation entirely, and a separate one from minutes approval.
How corrections get recorded
Two methods, and either is acceptable as long as the approving body is consistent about which one it uses.
Correct directly in the draft: The secretary updates the minutes before they're finalized, and the approved version simply reflects the correction with no separate note about what changed.
Note the correction in the next meeting's minutes: The original draft stays as written, and the minutes of the meeting where the correction was approved record what was changed and why. This is the more transparent option, since it preserves a visible trail of what the record looked like before and after.
If minutes have already been approved and an error surfaces later, neither of those applies. Robert's Rules treats that as a separate action, a motion to amend something previously adopted, recorded in the minutes of the meeting where that correction is made. The secretary doesn't go back and rewrite the original minutes; a note is added pointing to where the correction lives.
Signing and authenticity
Once approved, minutes are typically signed by the chair, the secretary, or both, depending on the organization's own rules. The signature isn't a formality. It's what confirms the document in front of people later is the one that was actually approved, not an earlier draft that happened to survive in someone's inbox.
This matters most when minutes get referenced well after the fact, in a dispute, an audit, or a new member trying to understand a decision made before they joined. An unsigned draft floating around creates exactly the ambiguity that approval and signing are meant to remove.
What happens if minutes never get approved
They stay in draft form indefinitely, and decisions made in that meeting carry less procedural weight if anyone ever needs to point back to them. This tends to happen quietly: minutes get distributed, nobody objects, but approval never actually gets confirmed because it wasn't placed on the next agenda.
The fix is procedural rather than dramatic. Approval belongs near the start of the next meeting, not buried at the end where it gets rushed or skipped when time runs short. If a backlog has already built up, working through unapproved minutes in chronological order at a dedicated point in the agenda clears it without having to relitigate everything from scratch.
Why this step matters beyond paperwork
Minutes function as a legal and organizational record, and that record carries real signal. A Federal Reserve study analyzing board meeting minutes at failed community banks found that attention to meeting formalities, including the kind of procedural language this article covers, declined measurably in the years before a bank failed, while attention to capital and regulatory concerns rose sharply. The boards weren't skipping minutes outright. They were letting the formal structure around them slip as more urgent problems took over, and that slippage was itself a visible symptom of the underlying distress. Approval is one of the formalities that's easiest to let lapse when things get busy, and one of the cheapest to keep intact.
Committees and informal teams that don't use any of this terminology still need to do one thing: give people a real chance to flag what's wrong before the notes become the official version of events. Whoever owns the notes should circulate them, give people a real chance to flag anything wrong, and confirm there's agreement before the notes are treated as settled.
Keeping the meeting minutes approval process from becoming its own admin burden
According to the Fyxer Admin Burden Index, 2026, a survey of 5,000 UK and US office workers, nearly 6 in 10 professionals handle meeting-related admin every single day. Note-taking and follow-up writing rank among the most time-consuming recurring tasks of the working week. The more manual the notes process, the harder it is to produce a record clean enough to approve quickly.
Fyxer's AI meeting notes feature joins calls, captures decisions and action items in a structured format, and drafts the summary before the meeting ends. That means the approval step at the next meeting takes two minutes, not the better part of an agenda item spent reconstructing what was actually said.
Meeting minutes approvals FAQs
Who approves meeting minutes?
The board, committee, or group that attended the meeting. The chair runs the process and the secretary records the outcome, but approval itself is a decision made by the group, typically through unanimous consent or, where required, a seconded motion.
Can meeting minutes be amended after they've been approved?
Yes, through a separate motion to amend something previously adopted, rather than by editing the original document. The correction is recorded in the minutes of whichever meeting approves it, with a note pointing back to what it changes.
Do informal meetings need a formal motion to approve minutes?
No. Unanimous consent is the standard method even for boards that follow Robert's Rules closely, and it's faster than a full motion. A formal motion only becomes necessary when someone disputes a correction or when an organization's own bylaws specifically require one.
What happens if a board member finds an error after the minutes are approved?
Raise it at the next meeting as a correction to a previously approved record, rather than treating the original minutes as still open for editing. The secretary adds a note referencing the change rather than altering the original text.
Does someone who missed the meeting get a say in approving the minutes?
Yes. Approval confirms the record is accurate, not that everyone present actually attended. A member who was absent can still review the draft and raise a correction if something in it looks wrong.