Comparing Inactive Mailboxes and Shared Mailboxes (2024)

Posted on May 31, 2022August 9, 2022 by Tony Redmond

Table of Contents

Options for Dealing with Leaver Mailboxes

When someone leaves an organization, a discussion often takes place about what to do with their mailbox and other data. For Exchange Online, the choice is straightforward:

  • Delete mailboxes.
  • Keep the mailboxes and let someone else take over the Azure AD accounts (and mailboxes).
  • Change mailboxes to become shared mailboxes.
  • Preserve them as inactive mailboxes.

Usually, the choice comes down to either a shared or inactive mailbox. Of course, the mailboxes belonging to ex-employees store other personal information in places like OneDrive for Business and Teams chat. Other information, like the documents kept in SharePoint Online sites, is by definition shared and remains accessible to other users. This discussion focuses on what to do about “leaver” mailboxes.

Shared Mailboxes

Shared mailboxes have existed in Exchange for a long time and are well understood. The advantages of transforming a user mailbox to be a shared mailbox are:

  • The mailbox remains online and is accessible using any Outlook client. It appears in Exchange address lists like the GAL and can continue to receive inbound emails.
  • Users can receive permission to access and recover mailbox contents. If necessary, administrators can grant users Send As and Send on Behalf Of permissions to allow them to send emails from the shared mailbox.
  • When a user mailbox becomes shared, it no longer needs an Exchange Online license unless it is larger than 50 GB or has an archive.
  • If necessary, administrators can easily change the mailbox back to become a regular user mailbox. At this point, it must have an Exchange Online license.

Changing a mailbox to be shared is a good approach when it’s necessary for other users to take over responsibility for the work of a departed employee. For example, the manager of a sales representative who leaves the organization needs to follow up on customer engagements and commitments. Privacy can be a big concern when someone gains access to another person’s mailbox because there’s probably some personal material among business-related emails. For this reason, organizations often limit access to a mailbox for a set period after which the mailbox is deleted.

Inactive Mailboxes

In an on-premises organization, it doesn’t matter if leaver mailboxes remain online. Licenses are not required because no one uses the mailboxes. If storage is available, leaver mailboxes can stay in place for as long as the organization wishes.

The situation is different within Office 365 as Exchange Online removes unlicensed mailboxes soon after the deletion of their owner’s Azure AD accounts. To make it possible for organizations to retain leaver mailboxes for compliance purposes, Microsoft introduced inactive mailboxes several years ago. If a hold applies to a mailbox or retention labels with holds exist on items in a mailbox, Exchange Online won’t delete the mailbox following the removal of its owner’s account. Instead, Exchange Online puts the mailbox into a hidden and inactive state. The content of the mailbox remains indexed and discoverable and can be found by eDiscovery searches.

The important things to remember about inactive mailboxes are:

  • Inactive mailboxes remain online until the last hold (policy or retention label) lapses or an administrator removes a litigation hold on the mailbox. At this point, Exchange Online will retain the mailbox in a soft-deleted state for a further 183 days and then permanently removes the mailbox. Inactive mailboxes don’t need any type of license. Microsoft is reducing the recovery period to 30 days from September 2022 (it won’t make much difference).
  • Inactive mailboxes are invisible to normal client interfaces, like OWA and Outlook desktop. They do not appear in Exchange address lists and cannot receive new emails.
  • The complete content of a mailbox remains available when it becomes inactive, including its archive and the compliance records captured by the Microsoft 365 substrate for Teams, Yammer, and Planner.
  • To access mailbox content, administrators must either recover or restore an inactive mailbox. Recovering an inactive mailbox makes it active and usable again. Restoring means that material from the inactive mailbox (or its archive) is merged into another mailbox.

Essentially, inactive mailboxes are a compliance tool. They facilitate long-term storage of mailbox content to ensure that the material in the mailboxes remains accessible if necessary. Inactive mailboxes are a good way to keep mailboxes of senior employees and other staff subject to regulatory oversight for extended periods. Figure 1 shows a tenant with shared mailboxes going back to February 2015 as viewed through the Microsoft 365 Purview portal.

Comparing Inactive Mailboxes and Shared Mailboxes (1)

If you have the licenses needed to use adaptive scopes with Microsoft 365 retention policies, you can create a user scope for inactive mailboxes. If the organization has the need to keep mailboxes for an extended period (say, five years), it’s a good idea to create a retention policy with a five-year retention period and an adaptive scope targeting inactive mailboxes. That way, even if the retention period for other holds and retention labels expire, you’ll know that Exchange Online will retain the inactive mailboxes for the required period.

The Choice is Clear

GUI access to inactive mailboxes is via the Microsoft Purview compliance portal. That gives you a good clue about the essential choice between inactive and shared mailboxes. If you want to keep information because it’s needed to satisfy some regulatory or legal requirements, use inactive mailboxes. But if the organization needs information in a mailbox for immediate business reasons, transforming a leaver mailbox into a shared mailbox is a better choice.

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Comparing Inactive Mailboxes and Shared Mailboxes (2)
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Comparing Inactive Mailboxes and Shared Mailboxes (5)
Comparing Inactive Mailboxes and Shared Mailboxes (2024)

FAQs

Comparing Inactive Mailboxes and Shared Mailboxes? ›

If you want to keep information because it's needed to satisfy some regulatory or legal requirements, use inactive mailboxes. But if the organization needs information in a mailbox for immediate business reasons, transforming a leaver mailbox into a shared mailbox is a better choice.

What is the difference between a shared mailbox and a normal mailbox? ›

User Mailbox: Users have default access to their own mailbox and can grant permissions to others if needed. Shared Mailbox: Permissions are assigned to users by an administrator, allowing multiple users to access the Shared mailbox without a direct login.

How to know if a mailbox is a shared mailbox? ›

A shared mailbox is a type of user mailbox that doesn't have its own username and password. As a result, users can't log into them directly. To access a shared mailbox, users must first be granted Send As or Full Access permissions to the mailbox.

How to check if a mailbox is inactive? ›

View a list of inactive mailboxes
  1. Depending on the portal you're using, navigate to one of the following locations: ...
  2. In the left navigation pane, select Data lifecycle management > Microsoft 365 > Retention policies.
  3. Select the Inactive mailbox option:
  4. The Inactive mailboxes page displays a list of inactive mailboxes.
Apr 1, 2024

What is the difference between inactive mailbox and soft deleted mailbox? ›

An inactive mailbox is a type of soft-deleted mailbox.

For soft-deleted mailboxes that aren't on hold, the mailbox is recoverable within 30 days. An inactive mailbox (a mailbox on hold before it was deleted) will remain in a soft-deleted with hold state until the hold is removed.

What is the limitation of a shared mailbox? ›

Licenses: Your shared mailbox can store up to 50GB of data without you assigning a license to it. After that, you need to assign a license to the mailbox to store more data.

When should you use a shared mailbox? ›

It allows departments that provide centralized services to employees (for example, help desk, human resources, or printing services), to respond to employee questions. It allows multiple users to monitor and reply to email sent to an email address (for example, an address used specifically by the help desk).

Can you send email from an unlicensed shared mailbox? ›

You're not supposed to be able to send from a shared mailbox.

What are the benefits of a shared mailbox? ›

With a shared inbox, everyone on the team has access to the same messages, reducing the need for each person to manage their own individual inbox. It saves time and eliminates the risk of messages getting lost or overlooked in someone's personal inbox.

Does a shared mailbox have its own inbox? ›

A shared mailbox can be used by multiple people at once. The mailbox has its own Inbox, Draft and Sent Items folders, which can be used by anyone with access to the mailbox.

How to check if a mailbox is active? ›

You can use the Get-MailboxStatistics cmdlet along with suitable parameters to fetch the list of inactive Exchange mailboxes. You can also specify the period of inactivity as required. Using this cmdlet, you can find out all users last logon time.

How long does an inactive mailbox last? ›

Remove the user's Office 365 account. All content in the inactive mailbox, including items in the Recoverable Items folder, is retained indefinitely. Retain mailbox content for a specific period after an employee leaves the organization and then delete it Apply an Office 365 retention policy to the mailbox.

Does Microsoft charge for inactive mailboxes? ›

Declaring a mailbox inactive is also free and allows the release of the corresponding Microsoft 365 license.

How long do shared mailboxes last? ›

Indefinitely, as shared mailboxes do not require archives. There are some caveats depending on the size and functionality required, but generally speaking - forever.

How do I recover an inactive mailbox? ›

Recover inactive mailboxes

Use the New-Mailbox cmdlet with the InactiveMailbox parameter to recover an inactive mailbox. Create a variable that contains the properties of the inactive mailbox. In the previous command, use the value of the DistinguishedName or ExchangeGUID property to identify the inactive mailbox.

What happens if you remove a license from an active mailbox? ›

When the license is removed from a mailbox without following other deprovisioning steps, this may leave the mailbox in a disabled state. In order to recover the mailbox, the user must relicense the Azure user object. That will reconnect the mailbox as long as it's within 30 days from the disconnect date.

Can a regular mailbox be a shared mailbox? ›

You can convert regular mailbox to shared mailbox by following these steps: Find the Admin option after logging in to your Microsoft 365 account. Find the option 'Active Users' under the Admin option. Choose the user you wish to convert and click on the option 'Mail Settings'

What is the purpose of a shared mailbox in Outlook? ›

A shared mailbox makes it easy for a group of people to monitor and send email from a public email alias like info@contoso.com. When a person in the group replies to a message sent to the shared mailbox, the email appears to be from the shared address, not from the individual user.

Why convert mailbox to shared mailbox? ›

When you convert a user's mailbox to a shared mailbox, all of the existing email and calendar is retained but can be accessible to any users with delegated access to the mailbox. Note: The user mailbox you're converting needs a license assigned to it before you convert it to a shared mailbox.

What is the difference between a shared mailbox and a dedicated mailbox? ›

The main difference between a shared mailbox vs. a user mailbox is that multiple people can use and respond from the shared mailbox using their own credentials, whereas a mailbox only has one username and password that works for access.

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