Microsoft Outlook 4+

Secure Email, Calendar & Files

Microsoft Corporation

    • Free
    • Offers In-App Purchases

Description

Outlook lets you bring all of your email accounts and calendars in one convenient spot. Whether it’s staying on top of your inbox or scheduling the next big thing, we make it easy to be your most productive, organised and connected self.

Here’s what you’ll love about Outlook for iOS:

- Focus on the right things with our smart inbox – we help you to sort between messages you need to act on straight away and everything else.

- Swipe to quickly schedule, delete and archive messages.

- Share your meeting availability with just a tap and easily find times to meet with others.

- Find everything you're looking for with our new search experience, including files, contacts and your upcoming trips.

- View and attach any file from your email, OneDrive, Dropbox and more, without having to download them to your phone.

- Bring all the apps you love in Outlook, including Facebook, Evernote, Trello and more.

- Open Word, Excel or other Office document attachments to edit them directly in the corresponding app and attach them back to an email.

--

Outlook for iOS works with Microsoft Exchange, Office 365, Outlook.com (including Hotmail and MSN), Gmail, Yahoo Mail and iCloud.

--

To make an in-app purchase of an Office 365 Home or Personal subscription, open the app, go to Settings and tap on Upgrade next to your Outlook.com or Hotmail.com account. Subscriptions begin at USD 6.99 a month in the US, and can vary by region. With an Office 365 subscription, you get 1 TB of storage for each user, access to all features in Word, Excel and PowerPoint on iPad, iPhone and iPod touch, and you can install Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and OneNote on PCs or Macs.

Office 365 subscriptions purchased from the app will be charged to your iTunes account and will automatically renew within 24 hours prior to the end of the current subscription period, unless auto-renewal is disabled beforehand. To manage your subscriptions or to disable auto-renewal, after purchase, go to your iTunes account settings. A subscription cannot be cancelled during the active subscription period. Any unused portion of a free trial period, if offered, will be forfeited when the user purchases a subscription to that publication, where applicable.

Privacy and Cookies: https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=521839
Terms of Use: http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=530144

What’s New

Version 4.2411.0

This update includes performance improvements and bug fixes to make Outlook better for you.

Feel free to send us any comments or questions by going to Settings > Help & Feedback – we’d love to hear from you.

Ratings and Reviews

4.7 out of 5
674.4K Ratings

674.4K Ratings

Skaelight ,

Outlook on iOS keeps going from strength to strength

As a product with a long heritage thanks to its PC forebears, Outlook on iOS entered the mobile app world with a lot of baggage. Almost everybody who has ever used outlook on a PC over the years has memories of screaming into the void when something seemingly nonsensical causes issues. These issues in turn opened the door for the market to flood with a plethora of competitive email clients, some good, others equally as challenging.

Outlook on iOS has not just jettisoned that baggage, it's changed the equation. It provides an easy, integrated way to use one or more email accounts sourced from multiple platforms. It's updates are frictionless. It's so good now it replaced all of the alternative email clients I've used. There's far less screaming into the void these days when it comes to sending or receiving an email. Well done team!

Phampton ,

Useless for Gmail folders or iCloud calendar

Every few months I download Outlook to see if anything has changed. Every time I delete it after half an hour and continue with Gmail. I work for an organisation that is somewhat Apple oriented, and it seems that Microsoft just isn't able to shed the culture war to be able to deliver a true cross-platform experience. 1. POOR SUPPORT FOR GMAIL FOLDERS. I use a Gmail address. 90% of my emails skip the inbox and are automatically directed to folders using rules. In the Gmail iOS app or iOS Mail (and most others) I can scan through the folder list to see an email count showing which folders have received emails, but the Outlook app doesn't automatically update the unread count for each folder, and I would have to click on every one, which makes all that rule organisation useless. 2. NO ABILITY TO USE ICLOUD CALENDAR. Pretty much any other calendar app for iPhone on the planet allows the user to see a local iOS “Home” or “Work” calendar, which can share into the Apple iCloud universe. Why has Microsoft decided not to include this? Some sort of middle finger to Apple users? There’s absolutely no way for my wife, who uses Outlook for iOS to enable access to work, to view a combination of my iCloud schedule and her work schedule on the same screen. 3. NO ABILITY TO SAVE TO ICLOUD. OneDrive, Dropbox, Google drive, Box : no problem. iCloud : no way. Another example of Microsoft refusing to design a truly cross platform app.

JamesTrev ,

It works, most of the time, with some minor frustrations

Yes, there is the convenience of managing one’s email and calendar on the run, away from my laptop computer. On the other hand, there are some frustrating limitations. Every now and again when I want to share something using Outlook, my iOS system tells me that I need to start the app in order to share something, yet the app is already running in the background. Once I create an event in my calendar, if it is in the wrong calendar, I can’t change it to the right one. I have to delete the event and recreate it. I can’t move a Mail message from one account to another like I can on my laptop. Once you know these limitations, you just work around them somehow. Nevertheless, I appreciate how challenging it must be for software engineers to keep up with all the operating system changes and try and tackle some of these annoying limitations as well. Congratulations: it is still my preferred email application.

Adding another comment 9th Sept 2023: the search functionality is extremely poor. I hardly ever find the most recent emails and have to go to my laptop instead. Seems like an obvious requirement, to find the most recent emails in date order. But no. Not on Outlook 365 for iPhone.

App Privacy

The developer, Microsoft Corporation, indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer's privacy policy.

Data Used to Track You

The following data may be used to track you across apps and websites owned by other companies:

  • Usage Data

Data Linked to You

The following data may be collected and linked to your identity:

  • Contact Info
  • Contacts
  • User Content
  • Search History
  • Identifiers
  • Usage Data
  • Diagnostics

Data Not Linked to You

The following data may be collected but it is not linked to your identity:

  • Location

Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More

Supports

  • Wallet

    Get all of your passes, tickets, cards, and more in one place.

  • Siri

    Get things done within this app using just your voice.

Featured In

More By This Developer

Microsoft Teams
Business
Microsoft Word
Productivity
Microsoft Authenticator
Productivity
Microsoft Excel
Productivity
Microsoft OneDrive
Productivity
Microsoft PowerPoint
Productivity

You Might Also Like

Mail App for Outlook
Productivity
Email - Edison Mail
Productivity
mail.com: Free mail & cloud
Productivity
Airmail - Your Mail With You
Productivity
SafePass: Accounts Manager
Productivity
Zscaler Client Connector
Productivity