When you click a shared OneDrive link, you expect to see the latest version of the document. Instead, the link opens an older version or a version you did not intend to share. This problem usually happens because the link was generated from a previous version, the file has version history conflicts, or the sharing link was created before the final edits were saved. This article explains why the link points to the wrong version and provides step-by-step fixes to ensure your shared links always open the correct document.
Key Takeaways: Fixing OneDrive Links That Open Wrong Versions
- OneDrive web > Version History > Restore: Restore the correct version of the file so the shared link points to it.
- OneDrive sync client > Pause syncing > Resume syncing: Force a full sync to update the link’s target to the latest version.
- Share dialog > Copy link > Manage access: Delete the old link and create a new link after the file is in its final version.
Why a OneDrive Link Opens a Different Version
OneDrive stores every change you make to a file as a separate version. When you share a link, OneDrive captures a snapshot of the file at the moment the link is created. If you edit the file after generating the link, the link still points to the snapshot version, not the latest edits.
Another common cause is version history corruption. If multiple people edit the same file simultaneously, OneDrive may save conflicting versions. The shared link can then resolve to a conflict version instead of the intended final version.
A third cause is link expiration or permissions changes. If the file owner changes sharing permissions after the link is created, the link may redirect to a cached version that no longer reflects the current file state.
Steps to Make a Shared Link Open the Correct Version
Follow these steps in order. Stop after the first method that resolves the issue.
Method 1: Restore the Correct Version Using Version History
- Open the file in OneDrive on the web
Go to onedrive.live.com and sign in with your work or school account. Navigate to the file that has the wrong version. - Open Version History
Right-click the file and select Version history. Alternatively, click the file to select it, then click the … (More actions) button and choose Version history from the menu. - Identify the correct version
Review the list of versions. Each entry shows the date, time, and the person who made the edit. Click a version to preview it. Confirm it is the one you want to share. - Restore the correct version
Click the three dots next to the correct version and select Restore. OneDrive makes this version the current version. All existing shared links now point to this restored version. - Test the link
Open the shared link in a private browser window or with a different account. The document should show the restored version.
Method 2: Force a Full Sync to Update the Link Target
- Pause OneDrive syncing
Right-click the OneDrive cloud icon in the system tray. Select Pause syncing and choose 2 hours. - Close all Office apps
Close Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and any other app that has the file open. This prevents file locks from blocking the sync. - Delete the local file
Open File Explorer and go to your OneDrive folder. Locate the file that has the wrong version. Right-click it and select Delete. The file moves to your Recycle Bin. - Resume syncing
Right-click the OneDrive cloud icon again and select Resume syncing. OneDrive downloads the latest version from the cloud to your local folder. - Recreate the shared link
Right-click the freshly synced file in File Explorer and select Share > Copy link. Send this new link to your recipients.
Method 3: Delete the Old Link and Create a New One
- Open the file in OneDrive on the web
Navigate to the file and select it. - Manage existing links
Click the Share button. In the sharing pane, click Manage access. A list of all shared links for this file appears. - Delete the old link
Find the link that opens the wrong version. Click the three dots next to it and select Delete link. Confirm the deletion. - Create a new link
Close the Manage access pane. Click Share again. Set the permissions you want (Anyone with the link, People in your organization, or Specific people). Click Copy link. - Distribute the new link
Paste the new link into your email or message. The link now opens the current version of the file.
If OneDrive Link Still Opens the Wrong Version
Link points to a conflict file
When two people edit the same file at the same time, OneDrive creates a conflict copy. The shared link may resolve to this conflict copy instead of the original. To fix this, open the OneDrive web portal and look for a file named with the pattern filename (conflict). Delete the conflict copy. Then follow Method 1 to restore the correct version.
Link shows a version from a previous co-author
If the file has been shared with edit permissions, each co-author’s changes create a new version. The link may open the version last saved by a specific person. To fix this, ask all co-authors to close the file. Then use Method 1 to restore the version you want. After restoration, ask co-authors to sync their local copies before editing again.
Link opens a blank or empty document
A blank document usually means the file was deleted and re-created, or the link was generated before any content was saved. To fix this, check your Recycle Bin in OneDrive on the web. If the original file is there, restore it. Then create a new link. If the file is not in the Recycle Bin, ask the file owner to share a new link from the correct file.
Shared Link vs Version History: Key Differences
| Item | Shared Link | Version History |
|---|---|---|
| Description | A URL that opens a file in OneDrive or Office Online | A list of all saved changes to a file |
| Purpose | Grant access to a file to other people | View, compare, or restore previous versions of a file |
| Version captured | The version at the moment the link was created | Every version saved, including auto-saves and manual saves |
| Can be updated | No — you must delete the old link and create a new one | Yes — you can restore any version to become the current version |
| Access control | Set permissions when creating the link | No access control — only the file owner and editors can view history |
Understanding this difference helps you decide whether to restore a version or create a new link. Use Version History when the correct version exists but is not the current one. Create a new link when the current version is correct but the old link still points to an older snapshot.
To prevent this issue in the future, always create the shared link after the file is in its final state. If you must share before final edits, use the Manage access pane to delete the old link and generate a new one after saving the final version. You can also enable Require sign-in on the link to ensure OneDrive always resolves to the latest version for authenticated users.