Sprint Plan Template
A structured sprint planning template with sprint goals, backlog selection, capacity planning, acceptance criteria, and risk tracking — everything your team needs to run focused, productive sprints.
SPRINT PLAN — Sprint [#]
Team: [Team Name] | Duration: [Start] – [End] | Capacity: [X] points
1. Sprint Goal
[One sentence describing the sprint outcome, e.g., "Ship the new onboarding flow so that new users can complete setup in under 3 minutes."]
2. Sprint Backlog
• [Story/Task] — [X pts] — Owner: [Name] — AC: [Acceptance criteria]
• [Story/Task] — [X pts] — Owner: [Name] — AC: [Acceptance criteria]
• [Story/Task] — [X pts] — Owner: [Name] — AC: [Acceptance criteria]
3. Capacity & Allocation
Total capacity: [X] pts | Committed: [Y] pts | Buffer: [Z] pts
• [Team member]: [available hours/points] (PTO: [days])
• [Team member]: [available hours/points]
4. Dependencies & Risks
Dependencies: [e.g., "API changes from backend team needed by day 3"]
Risks: [e.g., "Design review may push if stakeholder is unavailable Friday"]
Stretch goals: [Items to pull in if capacity allows]
How to Use This Template
Start with the sprint goal
Write one sentence describing the outcome. If you cannot articulate it clearly, the sprint is not ready to plan. The goal drives every item selection decision.
Calculate capacity first
Before selecting items, know how much your team can deliver. Factor in PTO, meetings, and a 20-30% buffer. Commit to what is realistic, not aspirational.
Select items with acceptance criteria
Every backlog item needs a clear "done" definition. Without acceptance criteria, you end up debating completeness during the sprint instead of building.
Flag dependencies upfront
Identify anything that could block progress: external teams, design approvals, infrastructure changes. Surface blockers before day one, not day seven.
Customize in Dewx
Inside Dewx, tell Dew: "Plan the next sprint for the engineering team." Dew pulls your backlog, checks team capacity and velocity from the CX Hub, and recommends which items to include. Track progress with built-in burndown charts and get daily alerts when items fall behind pace.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What should a sprint plan include?
A sprint plan should include a clear sprint goal (one sentence describing what you are trying to achieve), selected backlog items with story points or time estimates, acceptance criteria for each item, team capacity in hours or points, assigned owners, dependencies, and any known risks or blockers. The plan should be ambitious but achievable within the sprint window.
How long should a sprint be?
Two weeks is the most common sprint length and works well for most teams. One-week sprints suit fast-moving teams with small, well-defined tasks. Three- or four-week sprints work for complex projects but risk losing focus. Whatever you choose, keep it consistent — changing sprint lengths disrupts velocity tracking.
How do I estimate sprint capacity accurately?
Calculate team capacity by multiplying available team members by working hours, then subtract meetings, reviews, and overhead (typically 20-30%). Account for PTO and holidays. Start by committing to 70% of calculated capacity and adjust based on actual velocity over 3-4 sprints. Under-committing beats over-committing every time.
How does Dewx help with sprint planning?
Inside Dewx, tell Dew: "Plan the next sprint for the product team." Dew pulls your backlog, checks team capacity from the OPS Hub, and suggests which items to include based on priority and velocity. Track progress with burndown charts and get alerts when items are at risk during the sprint.
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