To save an email from Outlook, open the message, go to File, then Save As, and choose your format: .msg to keep it in Outlook, PDF to share it externally. You can also drag emails directly onto your desktop to save them as .msg files instantly.
Knowing how to do this properly matters more than most people realize. Outlook's inbox is not a reliable long-term archive, with emails getting caught in cleanups, accounts being migrated, and anything left unfiled becoming harder to locate the longer it sits there. Saving emails as files, PDFs, or into organized folders gives you a record that holds up regardless of what happens to your inbox.
Why saving emails matters more than people think
For account managers, ops leads, or anyone handling client correspondence, the risks of a disorganized inbox are more varied than they expect. Emails disappear in account migrations, storage cleanups, and IT transitions. Colleagues leave, taking their email history with them. Anything you haven't actively saved can be gone with very little warning.
There's also a mental cost to keeping everything in one undifferentiated pile. A 2024 study published in Omega (Elsevier) found that email overload negatively affects working memory, with task switching between emails a key driver of reduced performance. When your inbox is serving as a communication channel, a filing system, and a to-do list all at once, none of those jobs get done well.
The scale of the problem is significant at an organizational level too. According to the 2026 Fyxer Admin Burden Index, 5.6 hours per week are lost to routine admin, including inbox-related tasks. That's time that won't come back from manual searching.
Saving emails out of the inbox, or into organized folders within it, reduces that load. It separates what's live from what you're keeping for the record.
How to save an Outlook email as a file
The simplest method is to drag an email directly from your inbox onto your desktop or into a Windows folder. Outlook saves it as a .msg file, which preserves everything: the message body, any attachments, and the full thread.
If you prefer going through the menu:
- Open the email, click File, then Save As.
- From there, you can choose a destination and pick your format.
- The main options are .msg (Outlook's native format), .txt (plain text only), .html (keeps basic formatting), and .mht (a web archive that includes embedded images).
.msg is the right choice if you plan to open the file in Outlook again. If you're sharing it with someone who doesn't use Outlook, .html or .pdf tend to work better.
How to save an Outlook email as a PDF
To save as a PDF:
- Open the email, go to File, then Print.
- In the printer dropdown, select “Microsoft Print to PDF”.
- Choose your save location, name the file, and hit Print.
- The email saves as a PDF with its formatting intact.
PDF is the most useful format when you need to share the email externally, attach it to a document, or file it somewhere outside of Outlook. PDFs open on any device, don't require an email client, and look the same regardless of who opens them.
If you need to save multiple emails as PDFs, you'll need to do them one at a time using this method, unless you're using a third-party tool or a macro.
How to save emails to a folder inside Outlook
Using folders can help you declutter your inbox and organize things by client, project, or priority.
Creating a folder in Outlook is straightforward:
- Right-click on your inbox in the left-hand panel, select “New Folder”, and name it.
- From there, you can drag emails in manually or set up rules that move emails automatically based on sender, subject line, or keyword.
- Rules live under the “Home” tab.
- Click “Rules”, then “Manage Rules and Alerts”.
Keep the top-level categories broad and use subfolders for specifics. Don't create a new folder every time a new project starts. The more granular the structure, the harder it becomes to remember and maintain. Most complicated folder systems stop working after a few weeks.
If you use Outlook as part of Microsoft 365, your folders sync across devices automatically, so what you file on your laptop shows up on your phone.
How to save Outlook email attachments separately
Attachments are easy to miss when saving emails. A .msg file will include them, but if you're saving a PDF or plain-text version, the attachments won't be included.
To save attachments on their own:
- Open the email, right-click the attachment, and select “Save As”.
- You can also click the attachment to preview it and use the Save icon at the top.
- For multiple attachments, right-click any one of them and choose “Save All Attachments”. That saves everything in one step to a folder of your choice.
For contracts, invoices, or anything you'll need to reference regularly, save those attachments to a clearly named folder outside of Outlook. If it matters enough to keep, it matters enough to file somewhere you can actually find it.
How to archive emails in Outlook
Archiving is different from deleting. Outlook's archive moves emails from your inbox to an Archive folder, keeping them accessible without cluttering your active view.
To archive a single email, select it and press the Backspace key. Don’t press Delete, as this will send your email to the trash. Right-clicking and choosing “Archive” also works.
For automatic archiving, older versions of Outlook have AutoArchive settings under: File > Options > Advanced. This can be configured to automatically move emails older than a specified date into an archive file. In Microsoft 365, the equivalent is the Online Archive: a separate mailbox that appears in Outlook once your IT admin enables it.
If you're doing a full inbox overhaul, building archiving into your system early saves a lot of pain later.
How to export emails from Outlook
For a bulk export (every email in a folder, your entire inbox, or your sent items), go to:
- File, then “Open & Export”, then “Import/Export”.
- Select “Export to a file”, choose “Outlook Data File (.pst)”, then pick which folders to include.
A .pst file is essentially a portable Outlook mailbox. You can open it again in Outlook later, share it with someone else, or keep it as a backup. For anyone switching jobs or handing over an account, this is the most comprehensive way to keep a complete email record.
Note: if you're on an Exchange or Microsoft 365 account managed by your company, your IT admin may have restrictions on what you can export. It’s worth checking before you start.
Keeping your saved emails findable
Saving emails is only half the problem. Being able to find them six months later is the other half. That’s why it’s always helpful to name saved files with enough context to be self-explanatory.
For example: "Smith_contract_renewal_March2024.msg" is better than "email.msg".
Try to keep external email files in a folder structure that mirrors how you think about your work. And use Outlook's search function before manually digging through folders.
If you find yourself regularly spending time tracking down past conversations, your overall email management approach is probably worth reviewing. Saving individual emails is useful, but it doesn't replace having a system.
The inbox that never needs saving from
Knowing how to save emails is a practical skill. But the professionals who rarely need to dig through past emails are usually the ones managing their inbox well in the first place by flagging what matters, archiving what doesn't, and keeping their active inbox to what actually requires attention.
If email volume is part of the problem, Fyxer organizes your inbox automatically, categorizing emails, surfacing what needs a response, and keeping everything else out of the way. The emails that matter are easy to find because they were never buried.
Saving emails in Outlook FAQs
Can I save Outlook emails directly to Google Drive or SharePoint?
Not natively from within Outlook. You'd need to save the file locally first, then upload it manually. Some Microsoft 365 setups allow saving attachments directly to SharePoint or OneDrive through the attachment menu, depending on your organization's configuration.
What happens to saved .msg files if I don't have Outlook installed?
.msg files are Outlook's native format and require Outlook to open correctly. If you need to share an email with someone who doesn't use Outlook, save it as a PDF instead -- it opens on any device without requiring an email client.
Do archived emails in Outlook count toward my storage quota?
This depends on your setup. In Microsoft 365, the Online Archive typically has its own separate quota from your primary mailbox. Local .pst files stored on your computer do not count against your mailbox quota at all.
Is there a limit to how many emails I can export in a .pst file?
There's no hard email count limit, but .pst files can become unstable at very large sizes (generally above 20GB). If you're doing a large export, split it by date range or folder to keep file sizes manageable.
What's the difference between archiving and deleting in Outlook?
Archiving moves an email to a separate Archive folder where it stays accessible. Deleting moves it to the Trash, and it's gone permanently once the Trash is emptied. Use Archive for anything you might need later.
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