Applies ToOutlook for Microsoft 365 Outlook 2024 Outlook 2021 Outlook 2019 Outlook 2016 New Outlook for Windows
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You can easily mark time as Busy or Out of office in your Outlook calendar. But what if you don’t use Microsoft 365 and you don’t have calendar sharing enabled, but you do need to make your time away from more visible to your colleagues? This article explains how to add customized all-day meeting requests to coworkers' calendars, without affecting the available free time on their calendars.

Note: This feature is only available to individuals using a work or school account in Outlook with a qualifying Microsoft 365 subscription.

Select a tab option below for the version of Outlook you're using. What version of Outlook do I have?

Note: If the steps under this New Outlook tab aren't working for you, you may not be using new Outlook for Windows yet. Select the Classic Outlook tab and follow those steps instead.

Create an "out of office event" on your calendar in new Outlook

  1. In Calendar, on the Home tab, select New Event

  2. Add a title for the event, then select the start and end dates.

  3. To block out an entire day (or days), slide the All day toggle on. 

  4. In the Options group, select The Free/Busy icon. Busy, then choose Out of office from the drop-down.

  5. Select Save.

Send this "out of office event" to others

If you followed the steps in the previous section, the event you created shows you marked as Out of office. This means if someone tries to schedule a meeting with you, they'll see that you're unavailable. 

A common mistake when sending your out of office event to others is to open the original event and change The Free/Busy icon.Free/Busy to show you as Free instead of Out of office. However, doing so means that you'll now show as available to anyone trying to schedule a meeting with you. To avoid this, you must create a duplicate appointment on your calendar with The Free/Busy icon.Free/Busy set to Free, modify the event as needed, and then send it to others in new Outlook.

  1. In your Calendar in new Outlook, right-click the out of office event you created earlier and select Duplicate event.

  2. Add a new title for the event. For example, you might want to include your name in the title so anyone looking at this in their own calendar will know immediately what it's about.

  3. In the Attendees group, select Response Options, and clear Request Responses on the drop-down.

  4. In the Options group, select The Free/Busy icon.Free/Busy, and from the drop-down list select Free.

  5. In Invite attendees, add the intended recipients.

  6. Type any information that you want to share with the recipients.

  7. If you are alerting people to a series of recurring times that you will be away from the office, in the Don't repeat drop-down, select the recurrence pattern, and then select Save.

  8. Select Send.

When you send this meeting request with The Free/Busy icon.Free/Busy set to Free, the event appears at the top of each day in the recipient's calendar in new Outlook — a visual reminder that doesn't block any of their own work time.

Manage your availability in your calendar in new Outlook

By default, when you add an item to your calendar or accept an invitation from someone else, the item is marked as Busy on your calendar:

  • This affects the free/busy time others see on your calendar when they try to schedule a meeting with you.

  • If you use Teams, it also affects your status indicator and will show you as busy when you have meetings or appointments scheduled.

When you look at your calendar, the left edge of each item is color coded to indicate its status: A white edge indicates free, and a darker color indicates busy.

You can adjust any calendar item to show as Busy, Free, Out of Office, etc.:

  1. On your calendar, right-click the item you want to change.

  2. On the menu that appears, point at Show As, then select the option you want.

Want to adjust your status in Teams? See Change your status in Microsoft Teams.

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