The 7 Best Outlook Alternatives in 2026 (And Why Users Are Leaving New Outlook)

Microsoft is forcing the migration to New Outlook in 2026. Discover 7 serious alternatives to take back control of your inbox.

Email & Productivity
The 7 Best Outlook Alternatives in 2026 (And Why Users Are Leaving New Outlook)

What's Changing for Outlook in 2026

Outlook written in blue with an envelope on the left, all on a white background

Outlook remains one of the most widely used email clients in the world, particularly in enterprise environments. But 2026 marks a major turning point that many users didn't see coming.

April 2026: Microsoft is moving Outlook for Windows into the opt-out phase. The "New Outlook" becomes the default version on most installations. Users can still temporarily revert to Classic Outlook, but Microsoft is actively pushing the transition.

The problem for professional users: New Outlook does not support COM add-ins. These deeply integrated extensions that tools like CRMs, electronic signature platforms, archiving solutions, and security products have relied on for 20 years simply stop working the moment a user switches to New Outlook. No degraded mode, no fallback.

On top of that:

  • The January 14, 2026 bug (Windows 11 update KB5074109) caused Classic Outlook to freeze for many users, with sent emails no longer appearing in the "Sent Items" folder

  • Long-term support sunset: Microsoft maintains Classic Outlook through at least 2029 for Microsoft 365 subscriptions and perpetual licenses, but the transition is in motion

  • A New Outlook still under construction: Microsoft's own feature matrix admits that several Classic Outlook features are not yet available in New Outlook

If you're reading this article, it's probably because you're looking for an alternative that doesn't force you to choose between a version that freezes and one that breaks your workflows.

Why Look for an Outlook Alternative

Beyond the chaos of the ongoing migration, several concrete reasons:

You want out of Microsoft 365. The entire ecosystem (Teams, OneDrive, SharePoint) is designed to keep you in. But many independent professionals and small teams pay for features they don't actually use.

You want real AI in your email client. Microsoft Copilot in Outlook is powerful, but it requires a Microsoft 365 + Copilot subscription — often $30/user/month on top.

You find the interface too dense. Outlook has accumulated 25 years of features. For personal use or a small team, it's often overkill.

You want an open-source or more privacy-respecting alternative. Microsoft scans emails to personalize the advertising experience and to train its AI models.

If any of these points resonate, here are your options.

Before You Leave: What Actually Happens When You Cancel Outlook

This is the question that paralyzes many users: "if I leave Outlook, what happens to my 10 years of archives, my contacts, my calendars, my rules?" Here are the facts.

Your server-hosted emails aren't in Outlook. Outlook is a client that connects to a server Microsoft 365, Exchange, Outlook.com, or an IMAP account. If your emails live server-side, uninstalling Outlook doesn't delete them. By connecting with any other client (Thunderbird, eM Client, Mailbird, Apple Mail), you find the same messages, in the same folders, through the same account.

Your local PST archives are a different story. If you use .pst files stored locally (typical of POP3 setups or manual archives moved off the server), this data is actually inside Outlook itself. Migration capability varies by target client:

  • eM Client offers native PST import via File > Import > Outlook .pst, without requiring Outlook to be installed. This is the simplest path for PST archives.

  • Thunderbird does not offer native PST import. To migrate PSTs to Thunderbird, you either need Outlook installed on the same machine and use Tools > Import in Thunderbird, or convert the PST to MBOX with a third-party tool (MailStore Home is free for personal use).

  • Apple Mail doesn't import PST directly either MBOX conversion required.

Your Microsoft 365 contacts and calendars are server-side. If you use Outlook with a Microsoft 365 account (Exchange Online), contacts and events are stored on Microsoft's servers. Any Exchange or CalDAV/CardDAV-compatible client retrieves them automatically when you connect the account.

The real blocker: COM add-ins. If your daily workflow depends on deeply integrated Outlook extensions (HubSpot CRM, electronic signatures, legal archiving, antivirus with email scanning), Microsoft has confirmed that New Outlook does not support COM add-ins, only web add-ins. If you depend on critical COM add-ins, check first whether a web add-in version exists for your tools this is today's main barrier to leaving Outlook, more than the emails themselves.

Your rules and signatures don't transfer automatically. Client-side Outlook rules and custom signatures are proprietary and don't export to another email client. Plan to recreate them manually in the new app. Server-side rules (configured on Exchange Online via Outlook on the Web) remain active regardless of which client you use to connect.

The 7 Serious Alternatives to Outlook in 2026

1. Maylee: The Email Client That Thinks for You

Maylee is written in black on a white background, and on the left is a logo representing a box.

The positioning: a new French email client that doesn't just organize your emails it analyzes them, learns from you, and acts on your behalf. Magic Reply drafts your responses in your own style, AI Labels classify automatically, and Eco Mode deletes what no longer needs to exist. All without ever taking control away from you.

Best for: people leaving Outlook for something built for 2026 not a giant that grows heavier every year.

Capture d'ecran vue d'ensemble avec les labels de Maylee

What sets Maylee apart:

  • Auto-Reply (on the Expert plan) can send replies entirely on its own, based on a confidence score the AI assigns itself

  • Magic Reply learns your personal tone to draft responses that sound like you, not like generic AI

  • AI Labels automatically categorize incoming emails (Urgent, Price Request, Meeting…) without you needing to create a single rule. An email can receive multiple labels at once

  • Smart Views organize by project, by client, or by sender domain not just by account or folder

  • Eco Mode 🌱 automatically deletes sent emails based on your rules: after sending, after a defined delay, or once the recipient has replied. Less data stored, less energy consumed

Bottom line: Maylee is the only email client in this list to offer AI that learns your personal style and an eco mode. The product isn't yet publicly available you can join the waitlist at maylee.app.

2. Thunderbird: The Historic Open-Source Alternative

Thunderbird written in black with a blue bird enveloping a white envelope with its wings

The positioning: open-source desktop email client developed by Mozilla, free, available on Windows, Mac, and Linux for over 20 years.

Best for: people who want a fully free email client with no advertising, that doesn't depend on any commercial company.

What's included:

  • 100% free and open source

  • Compatible with any email account (IMAP, POP, Microsoft 365, Gmail, Exchange)

  • Available on Windows, macOS, and Linux

  • Built-in calendar, contact management, extension support

Strengths:

  • No limit on email accounts

  • Massive extension library

  • Mobile version (Thunderbird for Android) released in 2024

Limitations:

  • Interface can feel dated compared to Outlook

  • No native AI (only via extensions)

  • Learning curve for advanced features

Bottom line: Thunderbird is the number one alternative for those who want to leave Outlook for free without depending on another tech giant.

3. Mailbird: The Most Complete Windows Alternative

Mailbird is written in black with a small blue bird on the left, all on a white background.

The positioning: desktop email client originally designed for Windows that brings together emails, calendar, tasks, and third-party apps in a unified interface.

Best for: Windows users who want a direct Outlook replacement with a more modern design.

What's included:

  • Unified multi-account inbox (Gmail, Outlook, Microsoft 365, Yahoo, IMAP)

  • Native integrations with Slack, WhatsApp, Trello, Asana, and more

  • Snooze, reminders, open tracking

  • Available on Windows and macOS (Mac version more recent)

Limitations:

  • No native Linux version

  • Limited free plan check getmailbird.com for current pricing

  • Still-basic AI features

Bottom line: Mailbird is probably the most loved Windows email client after Outlook itself. If you're looking for something that "feels like Outlook but better," this is where you'll find it.

4. eM Client: For Those Who Want a One-Time Payment

Logo EM Client

The positioning: desktop email client with a lifetime purchase option instead of a subscription, based in the Czech Republic.

Best for: people tired of monthly subscriptions who'd rather pay once and be done.

What's included:

  • Free version limited to 2 accounts

  • Free version limited to 2 accounts, personal use only

  • Pro license at around $60 one-time per device

  • Lifetime Upgrades option at around $70 extra to access future major versions

  • Email + Calendar + Tasks + Chat in a single app

  • Compatible with Outlook, Gmail, iCloud, Exchange, IMAP

  • Available on Windows, macOS, iOS, Android

Strengths:

  • Clear business model (no subscription)

  • PGP support, snooze, send later, built-in translation

  • Easy migration from Outlook

Limitations:

  • Less modern interface than recent options

  • Little AI

  • Less frequent updates than subscription-based competitors

Bottom line: eM Client is the only serious alternative in this list that offers a "lifetime" model. If you plan to use the same email client for 5 years, the math is simple.

5. Spark Mail: The Most Versatile Cross-Platform Option

Spark written in black on a white background with a blue logo

The positioning: cross-platform email client by Readdle, one of the consumer references since 2015.

Best for: people who want a modern email client available everywhere Mac, Windows, iOS, Android, and Linux via web.

What's included:

  • Free plan with limited features (1 email account on new accounts, AI quotas)

  • Premium Individual at ~$4.99/month (annual) or $7.99/month (monthly)

  • Premium Teams at ~$6.99/user/month (annual)

  • Individual and team paid plans (check sparkmailapp.com for current pricing)

  • Smart Inbox that automatically prioritizes

  • Compatible with Outlook, Microsoft 365, Gmail, iCloud, IMAP

Bottom line: Spark is the right default choice when you want a clean, free email client that works on all your devices.

6. Canary Mail: For Security and Multi-Account

Logo Canary Mail

The positioning: security-focused email client with built-in encryption, AI features, and extensive multi-account support.

Best for: people juggling multiple email addresses (Outlook, Microsoft 365, Gmail, personal IMAP) and wanting a bit more security than Outlook offers natively.

What's included:

  • Limited free plan

  • Free plan with core features

  • Growth at $36/year (also available as lifetime)

  • Pro+ at $100/year (also available as lifetime)

  • No monthly subscription option yearly or lifetime only

  • Built-in PGP encryption

  • AI for drafting and summarizing

  • Available on Mac, Windows, iOS, Android

Bottom line: Canary Mail covers a wide range of needs- multi-account, security, AI without excelling at any. A good compromise if you don't quite know what you want.

7. Proton Mail: For Those Who Really Want to Cut Ties with Microsoft

Proton Mail written in black and purple on a gray background

The positioning: end-to-end encrypted email service, based in Switzerland, created by former CERN researchers.

Best for: people leaving Outlook on principle privacy, independence from Big Tech, protective jurisdiction.

What's included in the free plan:

  • 500 MB of storage on signup, up to 1 GB after onboarding tasks

  • An additional 5 GB on Proton Drive

  • End-to-end encryption enabled by default

  • One free email address

  • Web, iOS, Android, and desktop apps

Limitations:

  • No IMAP/SMTP access on the free plan (Proton Bridge reserved for paid plans)

  • Limited search by design (encryption prevents full indexing)

  • Modest storage if you receive lots of attachments

Bottom line: if you're leaving Outlook for privacy, Proton Mail is the most radical and consistent choice.

How to Choose Based on Your Profile

Your main need

The alternative to look at

AI that learns your style + eco-friendly

Maylee

Open source and free

Thunderbird

Replacing Outlook on Windows

Mailbird

One-time payment, no subscription

eM Client

Cross-platform (Mac, Windows, mobile)

Spark Mail

Multi-account + security

Canary Mail

Maximum privacy

Proton Mail

Frequently Asked Questions Outlook Alternatives

Will New Outlook really replace Classic Outlook?+

Yes, but progressively. Microsoft entered the opt-out phase in April 2026 for Outlook for Windows: New Outlook becomes the default version, but users can still revert to Classic. The final cutover date hasn't been publicly announced. For Microsoft 365 subscriptions and perpetual licenses (Office LTSC), Microsoft maintains support for Classic Outlook through at least 2029.

Will my COM add-ins keep working?+

Not in New Outlook. COM add-ins (deeply integrated desktop extensions) are not supported. Microsoft is pushing vendors to migrate to web add-ins, but many haven't done so yet, or with reduced functionality. This is the main blocker for businesses that depend on CRM, archiving, or e-signature extensions.

Can I keep my @outlook.com or @hotmail.com address?+

Yes. All the alternatives mentioned can connect to your existing Microsoft account via IMAP, POP, or Exchange. You keep your address, your contacts, your archives you just change the client that displays them.

How do I migrate my Outlook emails to another app?+

Most alternatives (Thunderbird, eM Client, Mailbird, Spark) support direct import from Outlook or via PST files. Allow 30 minutes to 2 hours depending on the volume of your archive. Your emails stay safe on the Microsoft 365 or Outlook.com side you just change the interface that connects to them.

Which alternative uses the fewest resources? +

Thunderbird and eM Client have historically been the lightest on Windows. Mailbird is more modern but also more resource-heavy. For very basic use, Thunderbird remains unbeatable.

Ready to get started?

Maylee

It thinks inside the box.

Resources

Contact

© 2026 Maylee. All rights reserved.