
Connect Miro technical diagrams to the tools you already use

Today’s modern development teams hardly ever work in isolation. To do their work, they rely on a network of tools - Jira for planning, GitHub for code, Confluence for documentation, Slack for communication, and more. The challenge is keeping diagrams, documentation, and daily workflows in sync without adding yet another platform to learn.
Miro solves this by connecting with more than 160 development and productivity tools through the Miro Marketplace. Instead of replacing your stack, Miro becomes the hub for collaboration that makes existing workflows both more visual and more connected. Technical diagrams don’t sit in isolation - they stay linked to the tools that drive your projects forward.
This way, teams keep using the platforms they already know and enjoy using, while gaining a collaborative space to align, share context, and move faster together.
Jira integration: system design to sprint planning
When building complex systems, moving from those early whiteboard sketches to sprint tickets often slows teams down. Miro’s Jira integration solves this by helping design and implementation connect in one single flow.
Teams can create Jira tickets directly from diagram elements - whether it’s a user story, a backend service, or a problem that has been flagged during the review process. As the project evolves, live ticket updates will show up inside the Miro board.
This means that architects and developers can see real-time progress without switching contexts. The integration runs two-way: update a task in Jira, and the board reflects it. Or, adjust a diagram component in Miro, and Jira will also get updated
No duplication. No manual updates. No wasted time switching contexts. Teams can move directly from brainstorming system design to tracking its implementation, without losing momentum.
GitHub and code repository connections
Many developers still feel most at home with code-based diagrams using Mermaid or PlantUML. Miro doesn’t replace those workflows - it extends them. Import diagrams directly from GitHub, Notion, or other platforms and keep working the way you’re used to.
Once imported to Miro, they’re no longer static images. Teams can comment, annotate, and enhance them with visual context. Developers keep their familiar text-based syntax, while the wider team gains a collaborative, interactive format everyone can work with.
Live documentation embedding across platforms
Keeping diagrams updated across platforms shouldn’t mean constant copy-pasting. With Miro, you embed diagrams as live, interactive components in Confluence, Notion, Microsoft Teams, and more. When a given source diagram changes in Miro, it updates everywhere automatically.
This means that both the architecture diagram in Confluence and the system flowchart in Notion stay accurate. No more outdated screenshots hiding in the documentation - your diagrams remain synchronized across every platform where they appear.
AWS Integrations
System design always comes with cost implications, and it’s best to address them early. To make this easier, Miro integrates the AWS Cost Calculator directly into architecture diagrams.
Instead of juggling spreadsheets and calculators, cost awareness is built into the design process. Architects and product owners can balance performance with budget from the start, making informed, data-driven decisions with the help of Miro’s AWS integrations.
Miro’s AWS Cloud View app provides a full picture of your AWS account so that you can understand, document, and share insights about the infrastructure with your team. View and optimize AWS architecture collaboratively, estimate and optimize spend, and deliver projects faster with integrated productivity tools.
Integrating communication tools
Communication platforms are where decisions happen, and Miro brings the relevant diagrams directly into those conversations. With Slack and Microsoft Teams integrations, diagrams can be shared and discussed in chat channels - no extra navigation needed.
With the Slack integration, you can view Miro notifications, create new boards, provide access or even create a brand new board without having to click between apps. This way, you’ll never lose context, or become a bottleneck if you’re away from your desk.
With Miro, your team can really make the most out of Teams too: simplify things by embedding Miro boards to calendar invitations, collaborate during meetings and get notified of new activity on your board through Teams.
Integrating with productivity tools
Miro also integrates with some of the most popular productivity suites. Embed diagrams in PowerPoint decks, sync them with Google Docs, or link them to project management tools like Asana and Trello.
This makes it easier to present architectures, share system updates, and document processes without extra steps. No more copying diagrams into slides or reports - Miro diagrams flow seamlessly into the tools your organization relies on every day.
FAQs
Which development tools work directly with Miro?
Miro integrates with Jira, GitHub, GitLab, Confluence, Notion, Slack, Microsoft Teams, Zoom, Asana, and more - over 160 tools in total. With so many integrations, the tools your team already uses are likely already supported.
Can we sync diagrams with project management tools?
Yes. Diagram components can easily become Jira tickets or Asana tasks. Live project cards can be embedded in boards, and two-way synchronization means updates stay consistent across tools so that everyone is always working with the most up-to-date version.
Do existing code-based diagrams work in Miro?
Yes. Diagrams written in Mermaid or PlantUML can be imported from GitHub, Notion, or other repositories. You can keep using text-based diagramming and still annotate visually.
How do embedded diagrams work in documentation tools?
Embedded diagrams in Confluence or Notion always remain live and interactive, not static renderings. Users can zoom, pan, and use them without leaving the page. When the source diagram changes, updates propagate automatically.
Can the AWS Cloud View app handle complex multi-service architectures?
Yes. The AWS Cloud View app can handle complex multi-service AWS architectures. You can import metadata from your AWS account, and filter by resource type, tags or by region to manage complexity. Once imported, you can edit the diagrams and use the AWS Cost Calculator integration to estimate spend.
What happens to integrations when a team scales up?
Integrations scale with your organization. Whether you’re a 5-person startup or a 500-person enterprise, Miro keeps Jira, GitHub, Slack, and all the other connections working smoothly as your team expands.