If you’re like most people, you use Microsoft Outlook to manage your email, calendar, and contacts. You might also use Outlook to view files. To view a file in Outlook, open the file in your computer’s file system. Then open the “Outlook” folder in the folder. (You can find this folder by clicking “File” and then “Open.”) ..


Searching through emails for attachments can be time-consuming and annoying. Thankfully, Microsoft has a “File” view in Outlook Online that makes it easy to find any document you’re looking for. Here’s how it works.

Microsoft Outlook has traditionally been an amalgam of email, calendar, people, and tasks, but that leaves out a key component: data. If you use the Outlook desktop client, then you have powerful search options to plug that gap. When it comes to attachments, there’s a dedicated “Has Attachments” option in the “Search” tab specifically for files that you’ve sent or received.

Outlook Online doesn’t have the ribbon, but you can still search for attachments by clicking the arrow in the “Search” box and switching on the “Attachments” checkbox.

Microsoft has gone one step further in Outlook Online and introduced a dedicated file view for Microsoft 365/Office 365 subscribers and Outlook Live accounts.

You can access this view by clicking the “Files” icon in the bottom-left corner of Outlook. By default, it will be between the “People” and “To-Do” icons.

If you can’t see it, but you have a three-dot icon instead, click the three-dot icon and then the “Files” option from the menu that pops up.

The default view will show you all files, with an icon showing you the file type, the subject, the sender, the date received or sent, and the folder in which the email with the attachment is kept.

In a slightly odd twist, image files are not displayed in this default view. To show those, you can either click “Files x” to show all files including images or click the “Photos” option in the sidebar to show only images.

By default, the files are shown in a list view, but you can click “View” and change to “Tiles View” to show the files as thumbnails instead.

This is where the “Photos” option comes into its own, as it’s much easier to find the image you’re looking for.

To open an attachment, double-click it in the Attachments list, and it will open a panel previewing the attachment and the mail that it was attached to.

From here you can download the file and perform various other actions depending on what file type it is, as well as perform the standard actions you would normally be able to do with the email, such as Reply, Forward, and so on.

If you just need to find an attachment and download or print it, you can skip this step and download or print it straight from the list. Click the three-dot menu icon next to the file name and choose the appropriate action from the menu.

Alternatively, select the item by clicking the circle to the left of it and the same options appear on the toolbar.

This is ideal for downloading multiple files at once, as you can select as many files as you like using this method.

When you’re done with your files and you want to return to your emails, click on the “Mail” icon in the bottom left of Outlook.

The File view is a good addition to Microsoft Outlook Online. It’s easy to use, quick, and lets you manage your attachments in a user-friendly way that is definitely more refined than just picking through search results.