You may see two different places to manage contacts in Windows: the Outlook app and the People app. This can cause confusion about where your contacts are stored and which app to use for updates. The core difference is that Outlook manages contacts within your email account, while the People app is a system-wide address book for Windows. This article explains the distinct roles of each application and how they interact.
Key Takeaways: Outlook Contacts vs. People App
- Outlook Contacts folder: Stores contacts directly within your Microsoft 365, Exchange, or IMAP email account, syncing across devices where you use Outlook.
- Windows People app: Aggregates contacts from multiple sources like Outlook, your Microsoft account, and LinkedIn into a single Windows 11/10 system view.
- Account Settings > People: Controls which contact sources appear in the People app and whether Outlook contacts are synced there.
How Outlook Contacts and the People App Are Designed
Outlook and the People app serve different primary functions. Outlook is an email and productivity client where contacts are a feature tied to your mail account. The People app is a modern Windows application designed as a unified contacts hub.
Outlook Contacts: The Account-Based Address Book
Contacts in Outlook are stored in a specific folder within your email account. For a Microsoft 365 or Exchange account, this is typically a default Contacts folder in your mailbox. These contacts are central to email functions. You use them to address messages, schedule meetings, and view history. Changes made here sync to the server and appear in Outlook on your other devices, like a phone or another computer. They are not inherently visible to other Windows apps unless you choose to share them via the People app.
The Windows People App: The Aggregated System View
The People app, pre-installed on Windows 11 and Windows 10, acts as a central address book for the operating system. Its main job is to pull in and display contacts from various connected accounts. These can include your Microsoft account, Outlook.com, Google, LinkedIn, and your work or school Outlook account. It provides a single place to see all your contacts from different sources. Some system features, like the Share dialog or certain pinned contacts on the Windows 11 taskbar, can draw from the People app’s aggregated list.
Steps to Check and Manage Contact Sources
You can control which contacts appear in the People app by managing your connected accounts. This determines the relationship between your Outlook contacts and the system-wide list.
- Open the People app in Windows
Click Start, type “People,” and select the app from the results. The app icon looks like two silhouettes. - Access the app settings
Click the gear icon in the lower-left corner of the People app window to open Settings. - Review your account sources
In Settings, select “Add an account” to see connected sources or manage existing ones. Here you can add accounts like Google or iCloud. - Manage your Microsoft account settings
For your primary Microsoft or Outlook.com account, select it and choose “Change mailbox sync settings.” Ensure the “Contacts” toggle is switched to On to sync those contacts to the People app. - Control work or school account syncing
If your Outlook work account is listed, select it. You may need to click “Change mailbox sync settings” and verify the “Contacts” option is enabled to allow those business contacts to appear in the People app.
Common Misconceptions and Limitations
Deleting a Contact in People App Does Not Delete It in Outlook
If you remove a contact from the People app, you are only removing it from that aggregated view. The contact remains in its original source, such as your Outlook Contacts folder. To permanently delete a contact from your Outlook mailbox, you must delete it from within the Outlook app itself.
People App May Show Duplicate Contacts
The People app often displays duplicates when the same person exists in multiple connected sources, like your Microsoft account and your LinkedIn account. The app has a “See suggested contacts” option under Settings to help find and merge duplicates, but automatic merging is not always perfect.
Not All Outlook Contact Fields Sync to People App
Custom fields or categories you create in an Outlook contact may not transfer fully to the People app. The People app supports a standard set of fields like name, email, phone, and address. Specialized Outlook fields for business details or user-defined ones might be lost in translation.
Outlook Contacts vs People App: Key Differences
| Item | Outlook Contacts | Windows People App |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Function | Email client address book | System-wide contact aggregator |
| Data Storage Location | Within your email account mailbox | Local Windows database synced from sources |
| Syncing Scope | Across devices with the same Outlook account | Across Windows features and apps on one PC |
| Contact Sources | Single email account (per folder) | Multiple accounts (Outlook, Google, Microsoft, LinkedIn) |
| Editing Impact | Changes sync to your email server | Changes usually affect only the local aggregated view |
You now understand that Outlook contacts are for email and calendar work within your account. The People app is a convenient Windows hub for viewing all your contacts in one place. For reliable contact management tied to email, always use the Outlook app. Check the People app settings if you need to add a social media account to your system address book. An advanced tip is to use Outlook’s categories to organize contacts, as this logic is preserved within Outlook even if the People app does not display it.