Outlook Data Files (.pst VS .ost)
When you add an email account to Outlook, a local copy of your information is stored on your computer. This feature allows you to access your previously downloaded or synchronized email messages, calendar information, contacts, and tasks without an internet connection.
Certain types of accounts, such as POP accounts, store their information in Outlook Data Files (.pst files). Outlook 365 accounts, Exchange accounts, IMAP accounts, and Outlook.com accounts store their information in Offline Outlook Data Files (.ost files).
Outlook Data File (.pst)
An Outlook Data File (.pst) contains your messages and other Outlook items and is saved on your computer. POP accounts – which is a common type of account. Download all of your email messages from your mail server and save them on your computer.
Note: In Outlook 2013 and earlier versions, IMAP accounts also used an Outlook Data File (.pst). In Outlook 2016 and Outlook for Microsoft 365, IMAP accounts use Offline Outlook Data Files (.ost).
You can also use an Outlook Data File (.pst) to backup or export items from any type of email account. For more information on backing up your email messages, calendar, contact, and task data, see Export or backup email, contacts, and calendar to an Outlook .pst file. You can also import email messages, calendar, contact, and task data from another Outlook Data File (.pst). For more information about importing items, see Import email, contacts, and calendar from an Outlook .pst file.
Note: You cannot import from an Offline Outlook Data File (.ost) file.
Because these files are saved on your computer, they aren’t subject to mailbox size limits on a mail server. By moving items to an Outlook Data File (.pst) on your computer, you can free up storage space in the mailbox on your mail server.
When messages or other Outlook items are saved in an Outlook Data File (.pst), the items are available only on the computer where the file is saved.
Offline Outlook Data File (.ost)
Most other account types, such as IMAP accounts, Microsoft 365 accounts, Exchange accounts, and Outlook.com accounts use an Offline Outlook Data File (.ost) file to store a synchronized copy of your mailbox information on your local computer. When your connection to the mail server is interrupted, for example, when you’re on an airplane without WiFi or if your internet connection disconnects, you can still access all emails, calendar data, contacts, and tasks that have been previously downloaded. You can read and compose messages, create appointments, and add contacts. However, your email messages won’t be sent and no new messages will be downloaded until your internet connection is restored.
When the connection is restored, changes are automatically synchronized, and the folders and items on the server and on your computer are identical again.
Outlook Group Storage File (.nst)
The first time you access a Group in Outlook, a new type of Outlook data file is created. This file has an extension of .nst, and stores your Groups conversations and other local Groups data. All of this information is synchronized between your computer and the email server, so there is no need to back up this file or import it when you set up Outlook on a new computer.
File locations
The fastest way to open the folder where your Outlook Data Files (.pst and .ost) are saved is to do the following:
1. In Outlook, click the File tab.
2. In right pane, click Account Settings, and then click Account Settings.
3. On the Data Files tab, click an entry, and then click Open Folder Location.
Outlook Data Files (.pst) created by using Outlook 2013 or Outlook 2016 are typically saved on your computer in the Documents\Outlook Files folder. If you upgraded to Outlook on a computer that already had data files that were created in Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 or earlier, these files are saved in a different location in a hidden folder at drive:\Users\user\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Outlook.
The offline Outlook Data File (.ost) is also saved at drive:\Users\user\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Outlook. Most data remains on the server; however, any items that are saved locally should be backed up. For example, Calendar, Contacts, Tasks, and any folders marked Local only.
See how you can backup Outlook mail using DaytaPol.
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