It happens in a moment of distraction. You finish typing an email, glance at the recipient field, and click Send before you have actually read it back. Seconds later, the realization arrives: wrong attachment, wrong recipient, wrong tone, or a sentence you would give anything to take back. The email is gone, and the clock is ticking.
Microsoft Outlook gives you two ways to address this situation. The first is Undo Send, a delay window that holds the email briefly before it actually leaves your outbox, giving you a chance to stop it before it is delivered. The second is Recall, a feature that attempts to delete the email from the recipient’s inbox after it has already arrived. Both have their uses, and understanding the difference between them is the key to knowing which one applies to your situation.
This guide covers both methods in full. You will learn exactly how to unsend an email in Outlook on desktop, in the web app, and on mobile. You will understand when each approach works, when it will fail, and what to do if neither option saves you. You will also learn the one setup habit that makes most of this unnecessary in the first place.
Undo Send vs. Recall: Understanding the Difference
What Undo Send Does
Undo Send is a delay feature that holds your email in the Outbox for a short window of time after you click Send. During that window, the email has not actually been transmitted to the recipient. If you act within the window, you can stop the email entirely, as though you never sent it. The recipient never receives it, and no recall notification is sent.
Undo Send is the clean solution. It works every time, regardless of which email provider the recipient uses, regardless of whether they have already opened anything, and regardless of what mail client they are on. The limitation is that the window is short, typically between five and ten seconds in the web app, and you must act the moment you realize the mistake.
What Recall Does
Recall is a server-side feature that sends an instruction to the recipient’s mail server asking it to delete the original message from their inbox. Unlike Undo Send, recall happens after the email has already been delivered. It is an attempt to undo something that has already occurred, which is why it comes with conditions and failure modes that Undo Send does not.
Recall only works when the recipient is also using a Microsoft Exchange or Microsoft 365 mailbox within the same organization. It fails against Gmail, Yahoo, and all other non-Microsoft providers. It also fails if the recipient has already opened and read the message. When a recall fails, the recipient keeps the original email and, in many cases, receives a separate notification telling them that you tried to recall it, which draws direct attention to the message.
“Undo Send stops an email before it leaves. Recall tries to retrieve one that has already arrived. When you have a choice, Undo Send is always the better option. Recall is what you use when Undo Send was not available, or you did not act in time.”
Which Method Applies to Your Situation
| Your Situation | Method to Use |
|---|---|
| You just clicked Send, and the Undo banner is still on screen | Undo Send click it immediately |
| A few seconds have passed, and the banner is gone; email not yet read | Recall: act as fast as possible |
| Recipient uses Gmail, Yahoo, or a non-Microsoft provider | Recall will fail: send a follow-up email instead |
| Recipient has already opened and read the email | Recall will fail: send a follow-up email instead |
| You want to prevent this situation going forward | Enable Delay Delivery or extend the Undo Send window |
How to Unsend an Email in Outlook on the Web
Using Undo Send in Outlook Web App
Outlook on the web includes a built-in Undo Send feature that appears as a notification bar at the bottom of the screen immediately after you click Send. This is the fastest and most reliable way to unsend an email in Outlook, and it requires no setup if you act quickly.
- Open Outlook in your browser at outlook.office.com or outlook.office365.com and sign in.
- Compose your email as normal and click Send.
- Watch for the Undo banner that appears at the bottom of the screen. It shows a countdown and an Undo button.
- Click Undo before the countdown reaches zero. The email returns to your drafts as a composed message, exactly as you left it.
- If you do not see the banner or it disappears before you act, the email has been sent, and you will need to use Recall instead.
How to Extend the Undo Send Window in Outlook Web
By default, the Undo Send window in Outlook web is set to a short interval. You can increase it to give yourself more time to catch mistakes.
- In Outlook on the web, click the Settings gear icon in the top right corner.
- Select View all Outlook settings at the bottom of the settings panel.
- Go to Mail and then Compose and reply.
- Scroll down to find the Undo Send section. Use the slider to increase the delay up to 10 seconds.
- Click Save. From this point forward, every email you send will be held for the duration you set before being transmitted.
Ten seconds is short, but it is enough to catch the most common scenario: clicking Send and immediately noticing something wrong. Make a habit of glancing at the recipient field and subject line the moment you click Send. That brief review, combined with the extended Undo window, catches a significant proportion of email mistakes before they reach the recipient.
How to Unsend an Email in Outlook Desktop (Windows)
Using Delay Delivery to Create an Undo Window in Classic Outlook
The classic Outlook desktop application on Windows does not have a built-in Undo Send button the way the web app does. Instead, the equivalent feature is Delay Delivery, which holds outgoing emails in your Outbox for a set number of minutes before transmitting them. During that window, you can open the email from the Outbox and delete or edit it.
The most practical way to use this is to set up a rule that delays all outgoing messages by two to five minutes automatically, so every email you send has a built-in recovery window without requiring any deliberate action at send time.
Setting Up a Delay Delivery Rule in Classic Outlook
- Open Outlook and click the File tab in the top left.
- Select Manage Rules and Alerts from the menu.
- In the Rules and Alerts dialog, click New Rule.
- Under Start from a blank rule, select the Apply rule on messages I send and click Next.
- On the conditions screen, do not select any conditions and click Next. Confirm when prompted that you want the rule to apply to all outgoing messages.
- On the actions screen, check Defer delivery by several minutes.
- In the rule description at the bottom of the dialog, click the word several and type your preferred delay, such as 2 or 5 minutes.
- Click Next, skip the exceptions screen, give the rule a name, and click Finish.
- Click Apply and then OK to save the rule.
Once this rule is active, every email you send will sit in your Outbox for the delay period before being transmitted. To cancel or edit an email during this window, go to your Outbox folder in the left sidebar, double-click the email to open it, and either delete it or make changes and save it. When the delay expires, the updated or deleted state applies.
Cancelling a Delayed Email from the Outbox
- Click Outbox in the left sidebar of Outlook. If the email is still there, it has not been sent yet.
- Double-click the email to open it in a full window.
- To delete it entirely, close the window and right-click the email in the Outbox, then select Delete.
- To edit it, make your changes in the open email window and click Send again. The delay timer resets from that point.
- If the email is no longer in the Outbox, it has already been transmitted, and you will need to use Recall.
Using Recall in Classic Outlook Desktop
If the delay window has passed and the email has been delivered, Recall is the next option. Keep in mind the conditions that must be met for Recall to succeed: both you and the recipient must be on Microsoft Exchange or Microsoft 365, and the recipient must not have opened the email yet.
- Go to your Sent Items folder in the Outlook sidebar.
- Find the email you want to recall and double-click it to open it in a full window. The reading pane preview is not sufficient.
- In the open email window, click the Message tab in the ribbon.
- In the Move group, click Actions.
- From the drop-down menu, select Recall This Message.
- In the dialog box, choose Delete unread copies of this message to remove it entirely, or Delete unread copies and replace with a new message to send a corrected version.
- Check the Tell me if recall succeeds or fails for each recipient box so you receive confirmation.
- Click OK to initiate the recall.
Using Recall in New Outlook Desktop (2024 and Later)
Microsoft redesigned the Outlook desktop interface in 2024. The Recall option is accessed differently in this version.
- Go to Sent Items and click the email you want to recall to open it in the reading pane.
- Click the three-dot menu icon at the top of the reading pane, labeled More actions.
- Select Recall Message from the dropdown.
- Choose your recall option and enable the notification checkbox.
- Click Confirm to send the recall request.
“In classic Outlook desktop, the Recall option lives under the Actions button in the Message tab. In the new Outlook, it is in the three-dot More Actions menu. If you cannot find it in either place, your account is likely connected via IMAP or POP rather than Exchange, and recall is not available for that account type.”
How to Unsend an Email in Outlook on Mobile
The Undo Send Feature on Outlook Mobile
The Outlook mobile app for iOS and Android includes an Undo Send feature that works immediately after you tap Send. A small notification bar appears at the bottom of the screen for a brief moment with an Undo button. Tapping it cancels the send and returns the email to your drafts before it is transmitted.
The mobile Undo Send window is very short, typically around five seconds. You must tap Undo the instant you see the notification. Once the bar disappears, the email has been sent, and the mobile app offers no further way to stop it. If you miss the window on mobile, your options are to open a browser on your phone, go to outlook.office.com, and attempt a Recall from the web app.
How to Enable and Extend Undo Send on Outlook Mobile
- Open the Outlook mobile app and tap your profile picture or initials in the top left corner.
- Tap the Settings gear icon at the bottom left of the menu.
- Scroll down and tap Undo Send.
- Select a delay duration. Options typically range from Off to 5, 10, or 15 seconds depending on your app version.
- The setting saves automatically. From this point forward, every email you send on mobile will be held for the selected duration before transmission.
Even with the maximum mobile delay active, the window is short. The most reliable habit on mobile is to review the recipient field and subject line before tapping Send rather than relying on Undo to catch mistakes after the fact.
Understanding When Recall Works and When It Fails
The Conditions Recall Must Meet to Succeed
Recall is not a guarantee. It is a request sent to the recipient’s mail server, and several conditions must be true for that request to be honored. Understanding these conditions before attempting a recall saves time and prevents the frustration of discovering after the fact that recall was never going to work.
| Condition | Recall Succeeds | Recall Fails |
|---|---|---|
| Recipient email provider | Both sender and recipient use Microsoft 365 or Exchange | Recipient uses Gmail, Yahoo, or any non-Microsoft provider |
| Email read status | Recipient has not yet opened the email | Recipient has already opened the email |
| Inbox rules | No rules have moved the email to another folder | A rule redirected the email to a subfolder or another address |
| Recipient device | Email not yet synced or opened on any device | Email already loaded on phone, tablet, or web browser |
| Recall timing | Attempted within minutes of sending | Significant time has passed and odds of it being read increase |
| Distribution list | All members are on Exchange and have not read it | Any one member has already opened it, recall fails for that person |
What Happens When Recall Fails
A failed recall does not simply do nothing. The recipient keeps the original email in their inbox. Depending on their Outlook settings, they may also receive a separate system message telling them that you attempted to recall the message. This notification effectively highlights the original email to the recipient and in many cases prompts them to read it more carefully than they otherwise might have.
This is why attempting a recall when the conditions are clearly not met, such as sending to a Gmail address or to someone who replied to the message five minutes ago, often makes the situation worse rather than better. In those cases, a direct, professional follow-up email is a more effective and less conspicuous response.
Checking Whether Your Recall Succeeded
If you checked the notification box when initiating a recall, Outlook sends you an automated email for each recipient confirming whether the recall succeeded or failed. These messages arrive in your inbox and look similar to delivery receipts. A successful recall message confirms that the message was deleted before the recipient opened it. A failure message tells you the recipient had already read the email before the recall request arrived.
Check these notifications as soon as they arrive. If a recall fails for any recipient, you know immediately that you need to follow up directly rather than assuming the situation was resolved.
Smarter Prevention, Setting Up Delay Delivery Permanently
Why Prevention Beats Recovery Every Time
Every method of unsending an email is a recovery from a mistake. The most effective email productivity habit is one that reduces the frequency of those mistakes in the first place. Outlook’s Delay Delivery feature, when configured as a standing rule rather than used case by case, creates a buffer on every outgoing email that costs nothing in normal operation and saves you repeatedly on the occasions when you catch a problem in time.
Professionals in high-stakes communication roles, including executives, lawyers, client-facing account managers, and customer support leads, often set a two to five-minute delay on all outgoing mail as a standard practice. The delay is rarely noticeable to recipients. The benefit, catching attachment errors, wrong recipients, and tone problems before they are delivered, is significant.
Delay Delivery for a Single Email in Classic Outlook
If you do not want a standing delay on all emails but need to delay a specific message, Outlook desktop lets you set delivery timing on individual emails.
- While composing the email, click the Options tab in the ribbon.
- In the More Options group, click Delay Delivery.
- In the Properties dialog, check Do not deliver before and set the date and time you want the email to go out.
- Click Close and then Send. The email sits in your Outbox until the scheduled time.
- To cancel it before it sends, go to the Outbox, open the email, and delete it or change the delivery time.
Using Scheduled Send in Outlook Web
Outlook on the web lets you schedule an email to send at a specific time using the Send Later option.
- Compose your email as normal.
- Click the drop-down arrow next to the Send button.
- Select Send Later from the menu.
- Choose a date and time for delivery.
- Click Send. The email moves to a Scheduled folder in your sidebar and transmits at the chosen time.
- To cancel it, go to the Scheduled folder, open the email, and click the Edit or Cancel Send option.
“Scheduling an email to send later is useful for more than just delay. It lets you write responses at any hour without signaling to recipients that you are working at midnight, and it ensures emails arrive at times when recipients are more likely to engage with them.”
Quick Reference Guide
How to Unsend an Email in Outlook by Version
| Outlook Version | Undo Send Method | Recall Method |
|---|---|---|
| Outlook Web App | Click Undo in the banner immediately after sending. Extend the window up to 10 seconds in Settings under Compose and reply. | Open the sent email, three-dot More Actions menu, Recall Message |
| Classic Outlook Desktop | Set a Delay Delivery rule to hold all outgoing email for 2 to 5 minutes. Cancel from Outbox during the window. | Open sent email fully, Message tab, Actions, Recall This Message |
| New Outlook Desktop (2024+) | Delay Delivery rule same as classic. Cancel from Outbox during the window. | Open sent email, three-dot More Actions menu, Recall Message |
| Outlook Mobile (iOS/Android) | Tap Undo in the notification bar immediately after sending. Enable and extend in Settings under Undo Send. | Not available in mobile app. Use outlook.office.com in a browser. |
| Outlook with IMAP or POP | No Undo Send. Move email to Outbox manually if the connection is slow; otherwise, no recovery option. | Not available. Recall requires Exchange or Microsoft 365 only. |
Unsend Checklist: What to Do Right Now
- Enable Undo Send in Outlook web settings and set the delay to 10 seconds.
- Enable Undo Send in the Outlook mobile app and set it to the maximum available delay.
- If you use classic Outlook desktop, set up a Delay Delivery rule for all outgoing messages with a 2 to 5 minute window.
- Before clicking Send on any important email, review the To field, the subject line, and the attachment list as a final check.
- When a recall is necessary, act immediately. Every minute that passes increases the chance the recipient has opened the email.
- Check recall notifications in your inbox to confirm whether the recall succeeded or failed for each recipient.
- If recall fails or is not an option, send a clear, prompt follow-up email rather than waiting and hoping.
Common Mistakes When Trying to Unsend Emails in Outlook
Waiting Too Long Before Acting
The single most common mistake when trying to unsend an email is hesitation. The moment you realize a mistake, you should be moving to the Undo button or the Sent Items folder. Every second you spend re-reading the email, deciding whether it is really a problem, or looking up how to recall increases the chance that the recipient has already opened the message and the opportunity to unsend is gone.
Attempting Recall for Gmail and Non-Exchange Recipients
Many Outlook users are not aware that recall is specific to Microsoft Exchange and Microsoft 365. If you send an email to someone whose address ends in gmail.com, yahoo.com, or any domain not hosted on Microsoft’s servers, recall will always fail. The recipient will keep the original email and will likely receive a notification that you attempted to recall it. If the recipient is not on Exchange, skip recall and go straight to a follow-up email.
Not Checking Recall Notifications
After initiating a recall, many users assume it succeeded and take no further action. If the recall failed, they find out much later, usually because the recipient mentions it. Always check the recall notification emails that arrive in your inbox after initiating a recall. They tell you definitively whether the recall worked for each recipient and prompt you to follow up if needed.
Confusing Undo Send With Recall
Undo Send and Recall are frequently confused because they address the same desire: taking back a sent email, but they work very differently and apply in different circumstances. Undo Send works before delivery and is reliable. Recall works after delivery and comes with conditions. Knowing which situation you are in and which tool applies is the most important thing to understand before attempting either.
Not Setting Up Prevention Before You Need It
Most people discover Outlook’s Undo Send and Delay Delivery features in the middle of an email emergency. The time to set them up is before a mistake happens, not during one. Spending five minutes enabling the Undo Send extension window in Outlook web settings, and five more minutes setting up a Delay Delivery rule in Outlook desktop, creates a safety net that is invisible in normal use and invaluable when something goes wrong.
Conclusion
The ability to unsend an email in Outlook comes down to two things: acting fast when a mistake happens, and having the right settings in place before it does. Undo Send in Outlook web and mobile gives you a brief but reliable window to stop an email before it reaches the recipient. Delay Delivery in Outlook desktop gives you a longer and more forgiving window to catch problems from the Outbox. Both of these features work best when they are already configured and running silently in the background, not set up in a panic after an email has already gone wrong.
Recall is there for situations where the window has closed, and the email has already been delivered. It is a useful tool when the conditions are right, specifically when the recipient is on Microsoft 365 or Exchange and has not yet opened the message. But it is not a reliable safety net for every situation, and attempting it when the conditions are clearly not met can draw more attention to a mistake than simply sending a correction would.
The practical takeaway from this guide is straightforward. Spend five minutes today extending your Undo Send window in Outlook web to its maximum setting. If you use Outlook desktop, set up a Delay Delivery rule for all outgoing messages. Build the habit of glancing at the recipient field and subject line in the moment before you click Send. These three steps together handle the vast majority of situations where you would otherwise wish you could take an email back.
And when a mistake does slip through despite all of that, follow the steps in this guide. Check whether recall is viable, attempt it if conditions are favorable, and send a clear professional follow-up if it is not. How you handle an email mistake often matters more to the recipient than the mistake itself.
Frequently Asked Questions About Unsending Email in Outlook
Can you unsend an email in Outlook after it has been read?
Once a recipient has opened and read an email, it cannot be recalled or unsent. The Recall feature specifically fails for emails that have already been opened. Undo Send only works in the seconds immediately after you click Send, before the email is transmitted. If the email has been read, the only available option is to send a follow-up email acknowledging the error and providing the correct information. A prompt, clear correction is the most professional response in this situation.
How long do you have to unsend an email in Outlook?
With Undo Send in Outlook on the web, you have up to 10 seconds, depending on how you have configured the delay in your settings. With Delay Delivery in Outlook desktop, you have however long you set the delay rule to hold emails, typically two to five minutes, to cancel the email from your Outbox. With Recall, there is no fixed time limit, but every minute that passes increases the probability that the recipient has opened the email and the recall will fail. Act as quickly as possible regardless of which method you are using.
Why is Recall not showing up in my Outlook?
The most common reason the Recall option is missing is that your email account is connected to Outlook via IMAP or POP rather than through Microsoft Exchange or Microsoft 365. Recall is only available for Exchange and Microsoft 365 accounts. You can check your account type by going to File, then Account Settings in classic Outlook. If the account type shows IMAP or POP, recall is not available. The Recall option can also be missing if your organization’s administrator has disabled the feature, or if you are looking at the reading pane preview rather than opening the email in its own full window.
Does Outlook have an Undo Send button like Gmail?
Outlook on the web and the Outlook mobile app both include an Undo Send feature that works similarly to Gmail’s. A notification bar appears briefly after you click Send with an Undo button that cancels the transmission if clicked in time. Classic Outlook desktop does not have this button natively, but you can replicate the same effect by setting a Delay Delivery rule that holds all outgoing email for a set number of minutes. New Outlook desktop, introduced in 2024, includes Undo Send functionality more directly. The web app version is the most flexible because you can configure the delay window up to 10 seconds in settings.
What should I do if I send an email to the wrong person in Outlook?
First, check whether the Undo Send banner is still on screen and click it immediately if so. If the email has already been sent, assess whether recall has a realistic chance of succeeding. If the recipient uses Microsoft 365 or Exchange and the email was sent very recently, initiate a recall through Sent Items and enable recall notifications. If the recipient uses Gmail or another non-Microsoft provider, skip recall and send a direct follow-up email immediately. Keep the follow-up brief and professional: acknowledge that the previous email was sent in error, confirm who the intended recipient was if relevant, and ask them to disregard the original. Most recipients handle these situations graciously when the follow-up is prompt and clear.
How to Write an Email?
Writing an email starts with a clear subject line, followed by a polite greeting. In the body, explain your message briefly and clearly, then end with a professional closing and your name. Keep the tone respectful and the content concise.