This page covers some of the common questions you may have about draft pages in Confluence. You can also read the overview of working with drafts.
On this page:
A draft is a snapshot version of a page which Confluence saves automatically at regular intervals while you are editing the page. Confluence saves these interim versions even if you do not save the page yourself. This is useful to prevent you losing work if your Confluence site experiences a problem.
By default, Confluence saves a draft of your page once every thirty seconds. A Confluence administrator can configure how often drafts are saved. (See below.)
Screenshot: Viewing Page Drafts
Confluence will save a draft of the page even if you haven't successfully added the page yet.
There are two ways to resume editing the page:

When this happens, Confluence will display a message informing you that you are editing an outdated page. If there are no conflicts between the two versions, Confluence will give you the option to 'Merge and Resume editing'.
If there are any conflicts, Confluence will give you the option to 'View the Conflict' or to 'Discard' your changes.
Screenshot: Editing Conflict in Draft
No. Whenever you click on any of the page tabs, Confluence will automatically save a draft. When you click on the 'Edit' tab again, Confluence will let you know that a version of the page you are editing was not saved and will give you the option to resume editing.
A Confluence administrator can set the time interval at drafts are to be saved.
Working with Drafts Overview
Concurrent Editing and Merging Changes
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