Hi Dana, I get this request a lot. Now, I actually like to use the Assignment Object type as it gives a much better idea of what work that particular team is actually working on (both tasks and issues). Let me know if you are interested in that. But if you'd prefer a project list, you might want to use the Project Users >> Home Team ID equals $$USER.homeTeamID filter. This will pull up every project that has a Project Team Member that has the same home team as you the person running the report. One thing to remember with this approach is that Project Team is not 100% accurate, meaning that someone might be on the project team but is not actually assigned to the project. We have a lot of project managers that copy projects and don't clear the Staffing tab before they reassign work. This means projects will sometime appear where no one is actually working on it. You can just have the Project Owner go back to the staffing tab and remove said users. With this project report, you might also want to have a column for Project Team so that you can see which team members are working on the project. displayname=Project Team listdelimiter= listmethod=nested(projectUsers).lists textmode=true type=iterate valuefield=user:name valueformat=HTML Not sure how many teams you have, but if you want the report to be a little more user friendly, you can create one for each team and then hard code the Team ID so you only see Project Team Members that are in that team. (Just remember to change the report filter to be Project Users >> Home Team ID equals [the actual team name]) displayname=Project Team listdelimiter= listmethod=nested(projectUsers).lists textmode=true type=iterate valueexpression=IF({user}.{homeTeamID}="REPLACE THIS WITH THE TEAM'S ID BUT KEEP QUOTATION MARKS",CONCAT({user}.{name}," | "),"") valueformat=HTML Hope this helps. Anthony Imgrund FCB