Classic Outlook Send Updates Only to Changed Attendees in New Outlook: What Changed

When you update a meeting in Classic Outlook, you can choose to send updates only to attendees whose response changed, saving time and reducing inbox clutter for others. In New Outlook, this option behaves differently and the setting location has moved. This article explains what changed between Classic Outlook and New Outlook regarding the Send … Read more

New Outlook Sensitivity Labels on Events: How It Works for Classic Outlook Users

Microsoft has introduced sensitivity labels for calendar events in the new Outlook for Windows. These labels allow you to classify meeting requests and appointments as Public, Internal, Confidential, or custom labels defined by your organization. For users of classic Outlook, the labels appear as read-only information on events created in new Outlook. This article explains … Read more

Use Auto-decline When Busy in New Outlook After Switching From Classic Outlook

When you switch from Classic Outlook to the new Outlook for Windows, the Auto-decline when busy feature moves to a different location and behaves slightly differently. In Classic Outlook, you could set automatic decline rules through File > Options > Calendar. In new Outlook, this setting is controlled through Calendar settings and your online calendar … Read more

New Outlook Keep RSVP Mail in Inbox Settings: Location and Practical Limits

When you receive a meeting invitation in the new Outlook for Windows, the RSVP email automatically moves to the Deleted Items folder after you respond. Many business users want to keep that RSVP mail in the Inbox for record-keeping or auditing purposes. This behavior is controlled by a specific setting that is hidden in an … Read more

New Outlook Shortened Meetings: End early or start late after migration

After migrating to the new Outlook for Windows, you may notice your calendar meetings now automatically end 5 to 15 minutes early or start late. This happens because the new Outlook enables a default setting called Shortened Meetings, which adds buffer time between appointments. The feature aims to prevent back-to-back meeting fatigue, but it can … Read more

Classic Outlook to New Outlook: Working Elsewhere Status – Show location without classic options

When you switch from classic Outlook to the new Outlook for Windows, the familiar options to set a Working Elsewhere status with a specific location like Coffee Shop or Home Office are no longer visible. This change occurs because the new Outlook uses a simplified interface that integrates with Microsoft 365 presence and calendar settings … Read more

New Outlook vs Classic Outlook Teammates Calendars: Where to Find It

When you switch from Classic Outlook to the New Outlook for Windows, one of the first things you may notice is that the Teammates Calendars feature has moved. In Classic Outlook, these calendars appeared automatically in the navigation pane under the People you manage section. In New Outlook, the same shared calendars are available but … Read more

Where to Find Work Hours and Location in New Outlook After Leaving Classic Outlook

When you switch from the classic version of Outlook to the new Outlook for Windows, many familiar settings move to different locations. The Work Hours and Location settings, which you used to configure in File > Options > Calendar, are no longer found there. This change happens because the new Outlook is built on a … Read more

Classic Outlook Third-party Online Meeting Defaults in New Outlook: What Changed

If you rely on Zoom, Cisco Webex, or another third-party meeting provider, you may have noticed that the default online meeting button behaves differently in the new Outlook for Windows. In classic Outlook, third-party add-ins like the Zoom for Outlook add-in could set themselves as the default online meeting provider. The new Outlook replaces this … Read more

New Outlook Public Folders Partially Available: Best Workaround

If you use the new Outlook for Windows and work with shared mailboxes, you may have noticed that public folders are only partially available. Some folders appear empty, others fail to load, and certain hierarchy branches are missing entirely. This limitation exists because the new Outlook does not fully support the legacy public folder infrastructure … Read more