Your team needs a shared view of meetings, deadlines, and time off. A personal calendar is not visible to others, which leads to scheduling conflicts and missed information. Microsoft 365 provides a Group Calendar feature for this exact purpose. This article explains how to create a group calendar in Outlook and manage team schedules effectively.
Key Takeaways: Creating a Microsoft 365 Group Calendar
- Home > New Group: Creates a new Microsoft 365 Group which automatically includes a shared mailbox, calendar, and file storage.
- Calendar > Add Calendar > Open Shared Calendar: Opens an existing group calendar directly in your Outlook view for scheduling.
- Group Settings > Edit: Manages member permissions to control who can create events on the shared team calendar.
Understanding Microsoft 365 Group Calendars
A Group Calendar is part of a Microsoft 365 Group, which is a shared workspace. The group includes a shared inbox, a SharePoint document library, and a Planner board. The calendar is created automatically when you make the group. All members you add can view, create, and edit events on this calendar by default. This setup is different from simply sharing a personal calendar, as the group calendar is a separate, dedicated object owned by the team.
You need a Microsoft 365 business or enterprise plan that includes Exchange Online. Your administrator must have enabled the creation of Microsoft 365 Groups. You can create and manage these groups directly from the Outlook desktop application or from Outlook on the web.
Steps to Create a New Group Calendar
The primary method is to create a new Microsoft 365 Group. This process builds the shared calendar and all connected resources in one action.
- Open Outlook and navigate to the Groups section
In the Outlook desktop app, look at the bottom of the folder pane. Click on the Groups header. In Outlook on the web, find the Groups section in the app launcher or the left navigation pane. - Start the new group creation
Click the New Group button or link. A creation pane or dialog box will open. - Configure the basic group settings
Enter a name for the group, like “Marketing Team” or “Project Alpha”. Add a brief description that explains the group’s purpose. Choose a privacy setting: Private for invite-only access or Public for anyone in your organization to find and join. - Add members to the group
Type the names or email addresses of your team members. You can assign the Owner or Member role. Owners can manage settings and membership. - Create the group and access the calendar
Click Create or Finish. The group and its calendar are now created. To open the calendar, find the new group under your Groups list. Expand it and click on Calendar. You can also add it to your calendar view by going to your main Calendar tab, selecting Add Calendar, and choosing Open Shared Calendar, then typing the group’s name.
Adding an Existing Group Calendar to Your View
If a group already exists, you can add its calendar without being an owner.
- Go to your Calendar view
In Outlook, click the calendar icon in the bottom-left navigation. - Open the Add Calendar menu
On the Home ribbon, click Add Calendar and select Open Shared Calendar from the dropdown. - Select the group
In the dialog box, type the name of the Microsoft 365 Group. Select it from the list that appears and click OK. The group calendar will now appear in your calendar overlay view.
Common Mistakes and Calendar Management Tips
“I created a group but cannot see the calendar”
It can take a few minutes for all group resources to provision. Close and reopen Outlook. If it still does not appear, use the Open Shared Calendar method described above. Ensure you are clicking on the group name under the Groups section, not searching in the global address list.
Managing permissions and event creation
By default, all group members can edit the calendar. To restrict this, a group owner must change the settings. In Outlook on the web, go to the group, click the three dots for More options, and select Edit group. Under Settings, you can change who can post to the calendar or send email to the group.
Distinguishing between personal and group events
When creating an event on the group calendar, always ensure you have selected the group calendar as the location, not your personal calendar. In the meeting scheduler, the calendar name is shown at the top. Color-code the group calendar in your overlay view for instant visual recognition.
Group Calendar vs. Shared Personal Calendar
| Item | Microsoft 365 Group Calendar | Shared Personal Calendar |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership | Owned by the group, not an individual | Owned by a single user |
| Access Management | Managed via group membership | Managed per person by the calendar owner |
| Associated Resources | Includes shared mailbox, files, planner | Only the calendar is shared |
| Persistence | Remains if members leave the company | May be lost if the owner’s account is deleted |
| Best For | Ongoing team projects and departments | Ad-hoc sharing with a few colleagues |
You can now create a shared calendar that your entire team can use for scheduling. Use the group’s shared inbox for calendar-related communications to keep everything in one place. For advanced control, explore creating booking schedules in the group calendar using Microsoft Bookings.