When you switch from Classic Outlook to the new Outlook for Windows, the search experience changes significantly. In Classic Outlook, the “Top Results” section at the top of the search pane showed your most relevant emails, contacts, and calendar items. In new Outlook, this feature is replaced by a different search layout that can be confusing at first. This article explains where the equivalent results appear, how the new search algorithm works, and how to get the most relevant matches quickly.
Key Takeaways: Finding Top Results in New Outlook
- Search box at the top of the main window: Use this to start a search; results now appear in a single list sorted by relevance, not a separate “Top Results” section.
- Ctrl + E keyboard shortcut: Instantly moves focus to the search box from anywhere in Outlook.
- Search filters under the search box: Narrow results to Mail, Calendar, People, or Files to find the exact item faster.
How New Outlook Search Differs from Classic Outlook
Classic Outlook displayed search results in a two-panel layout. The top panel showed “Top Results” — a small set of items Outlook considered the most relevant. The bottom panel showed “All Results” with every match. New Outlook removes the two-panel split entirely. Instead, it shows a single unified list of results sorted by relevance. The most relevant items appear first in this list. The algorithm considers recency, sender frequency, and how often you open messages from that person. There is no visual label like “Top Results” anymore, but the first few items in the list serve the same purpose.
What Triggers a Relevance Score
New Outlook assigns a relevance score to every search result based on several factors. The date the message was sent or received carries the highest weight. Messages from people you email frequently rank higher. Messages you have opened or replied to also get a boost. Attachments and flagged items appear earlier in the list. The search engine indexes the subject line, body text, and attachments. This means a message from a colleague you email daily about a project update will appear before a newsletter from a mailing list, even if the newsletter contains the exact search term.
Where to Look for the Best Matches
After you type a search term and press Enter, the search pane opens. The first two to four items in the list are the equivalent of Classic Outlook’s “Top Results.” They are bolded or have a slightly larger font in some builds of new Outlook. Scroll down to see the rest of the matching items. If you do not see the item you expect, use the filter buttons directly below the search box: Mail, Calendar, People, and Files. Clicking one of these filters narrows the list to that category only, which often surfaces the top result for that specific type.
Steps to Find the Most Relevant Search Results in New Outlook
Follow these steps to locate the items that would have appeared in the “Top Results” section in Classic Outlook.
- Open the search box
Click inside the search box at the top of the new Outlook window. You can also press Ctrl + E on your keyboard to move focus directly to the search box. - Type your search term
Enter a keyword, sender name, or subject phrase. Do not press Enter yet. New Outlook shows a dropdown with suggested contacts and recent searches. This is not the full results list. - Press Enter to see all results
Press Enter on your keyboard. The search pane opens below the search box. The top items in the list are the most relevant matches. Read the subject line and sender name for each item. The first two to four items are your new “Top Results.” - Use category filters to refine the list
Below the search box, click Mail, Calendar, People, or Files. This removes all other categories from the list. The top item in the filtered list is the top result for that category. - Sort by date if needed
Click the Sort button (usually labeled “Relevance” by default) at the top of the search results pane. Select Date to reorder the list from newest to oldest. This helps when you know the item is recent but the relevance algorithm is not ranking it first.
Using Advanced Search for Precise Results
If the default relevance sort does not show the item you need, use Advanced Search. Click the funnel icon or the three-dot menu next to the search box and select Advanced Search. Fill in fields such as From, Sent To, Subject, Date Range, and Has Attachments. This bypasses the relevance algorithm entirely and returns only items that match your exact criteria. The results display in date order by default.
Why Your Top Result Might Not Appear First
Several factors can cause the new Outlook search to miss an item you consider the top result. Understanding these factors helps you adjust your search strategy.
New Outlook Uses a Different Search Index
New Outlook builds its own search index separate from the Windows Search index used by Classic Outlook. If you recently switched, the index may still be incomplete. New Outlook indexes your mailbox in the background. For large mailboxes, this can take several hours. During this time, search results may be incomplete or incorrectly ranked. To check indexing status, go to Settings > General > Search. The indexing progress bar shows how much of your mailbox has been indexed.
The Relevance Algorithm Prioritizes Recent Activity
New Outlook’s relevance algorithm heavily weights messages you have opened, replied to, or forwarded in the last 30 days. An important message from six months ago that you have not interacted with since will rank lower than a less important message from yesterday. To find the older message, use the Date filter in the search pane or switch to Advanced Search and set a specific date range.
Search Scope Is Limited by Default
New Outlook searches only your current mailbox by default. If you have multiple accounts or shared mailboxes configured, you must explicitly include them. Click the search box, then click the three-dot menu and select Search All Mailboxes. This expands the scope and can bring a different set of top results from other mailboxes.
New Outlook Search vs Classic Outlook Search: Key Differences
| Item | New Outlook | Classic Outlook |
|---|---|---|
| Results layout | Single list sorted by relevance | Two panels: Top Results and All Results |
| Top Results label | Not present; first items in list serve the same purpose | Visible label at top of search pane |
| Search index | New Outlook proprietary index | Windows Search index |
| Category filters | Mail, Calendar, People, Files buttons below search box | Filter buttons in the ribbon or search tab |
| Advanced Search | Funnel icon or three-dot menu | Search tab in the ribbon |
| Relevance factors | Recency, sender frequency, open/reply history, attachments | Recency, sender frequency, open history |
The transition from Classic Outlook to new Outlook changes how you find the most relevant search results. Instead of a separate “Top Results” section, the first few items in the relevance-sorted list serve the same function. Use Ctrl + E to start a search quickly, then apply category filters or Advanced Search when the default list does not show what you need. For the best results, ensure your mailbox is fully indexed and consider expanding the search scope to include all mailboxes. If you frequently need to find older messages, use the Date sort option or Advanced Search with a date range to bypass the relevance algorithm entirely.