OneDrive AutoSave Turns Off When a File Is Copied Locally
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OneDrive AutoSave Turns Off When a File Is Copied Locally

You open a Word or Excel file from OneDrive, make changes, and notice that AutoSave has turned off. This happens after you copy the file from a synced folder to a local folder on your computer. The cause is that AutoSave requires a file to be stored in the OneDrive cloud, not on a local drive. This article explains why AutoSave turns off when a file is copied locally, how to restore AutoSave, and how to avoid the problem in the future.

Key Takeaways: AutoSave Turns Off on Copied Local Files

  • File > Save As > OneDrive: Move the file back to OneDrive to re-enable AutoSave without losing changes.
  • File > Info > AutoSave toggle: Manually turn AutoSave on if the file stays in a synced folder but AutoSave does not reactivate.
  • OneDrive sync status icon: Check that the file shows a green checkmark in File Explorer before opening it in Office apps.

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Why AutoSave Turns Off After Copying a File Locally

Microsoft 365 apps such as Word, Excel, and PowerPoint enable AutoSave only for files that are saved to OneDrive or SharePoint. When you copy a file from a OneDrive-synced folder to a local folder that is not synced, the file loses its cloud connection. The Office app then treats the file as a local document and disables AutoSave. The AutoSave toggle in the title bar becomes grayed out or set to Off. This behavior is by design. AutoSave relies on the file being stored in the cloud so that every change is saved to the server automatically. A local copy has no mechanism to write changes back to the cloud without manual action.

What Happens When You Copy a File Instead of Moving It

Copying a file creates a duplicate. The original file remains in the OneDrive folder and keeps AutoSave enabled. The copy, stored on a local drive, has no link to OneDrive. When you open the local copy, the Office app checks the file path. If the path is not under the OneDrive root folder, AutoSave is turned off. The app also shows a message in the title bar: “AutoSave is off.” The local copy will not sync changes to the cloud or other devices.

Steps to Restore AutoSave on a Copied File

If you have already copied a file to a local folder and AutoSave is off, follow these steps to move the file back to OneDrive and re-enable AutoSave. These steps work in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint for Microsoft 365.

  1. Close the Office file
    Exit the app or close the document. This ensures no file locks interfere with the move.
  2. Open File Explorer and locate the copied file
    Browse to the local folder where you saved the copy. The file may be on your Desktop, Documents, or another local folder.
  3. Cut the file
    Right-click the file and select Cut, or press Ctrl+X. Do not copy the file again.
  4. Navigate to your OneDrive folder
    In File Explorer, click OneDrive in the left navigation pane. The default path is C:\Users\YourName\OneDrive.
  5. Paste the file into the OneDrive folder
    Right-click an empty area inside the OneDrive folder and select Paste, or press Ctrl+V. Wait for the file to upload. A green checkmark icon on the file means it is synced.
  6. Open the file from OneDrive
    Double-click the file in the OneDrive folder. The Office app opens the file, and AutoSave should turn on automatically. If it does not, click the AutoSave toggle in the title bar to set it to On.

Alternative Method: Save As to OneDrive

If you prefer not to close the file, you can use Save As while the file is open.

  1. With the local file open, go to File > Save As
    Click File in the ribbon, then select Save As.
  2. Choose OneDrive as the save location
    In the Save As dialog, click OneDrive on the left. Select a folder or create a new one.
  3. Click Save
    The file is saved to OneDrive. AutoSave will turn on after the save completes.

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Common Mistakes and How to Avoid AutoSave Turning Off

Copying a file from OneDrive to a USB drive or external drive

External drives are not synced with OneDrive. AutoSave will always turn off on files opened from removable media. Instead of copying the file, use OneDrive to share the file. Right-click the file in OneDrive and select Share. Send the link to the recipient. This keeps the file in the cloud and AutoSave enabled.

Dragging a file from OneDrive to the Desktop

Dragging a file from a synced folder to the Desktop moves the file out of OneDrive. The file is no longer synced, and AutoSave turns off. To keep a file on the Desktop while maintaining AutoSave, create a shortcut. Right-click the file in OneDrive and select Show more options > Create shortcut. Place the shortcut on the Desktop. The original file stays in OneDrive.

Opening a file from a recent list that was copied

If you opened a file from OneDrive, then copied it locally and opened the copy, the recent list in Office may point to the local copy. To avoid this, always open files from the OneDrive folder or from the Office app’s Home page under the OneDrive section. Clear the recent list if it shows the local path: File > Open > Right-click the file > Remove from list.

Files On-Demand vs Local Copy: AutoSave Behavior

Item File opened from OneDrive (Files On-Demand) File copied to local drive
AutoSave status On automatically Off by default
File location Cloud with local placeholder No cloud connection
Changes saved to OneDrive cloud immediately Local storage only
Sync to other devices Yes, automatically No
How to restore AutoSave Not needed Move or save file back to OneDrive

AutoSave is a feature that only works with cloud-stored files. When you copy a file locally, you break the cloud link. The Office app detects the local path and disables AutoSave. To keep AutoSave on, always work with files that live inside your OneDrive folder. If you need a local backup, use OneDrive’s sync feature to keep a copy on your computer while the original stays in the cloud. Do not copy files out of OneDrive for editing.

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