I want to delete all my Outlook accounts, remove all configurations and everything and start afresh. Basically, like do a complete reset. But, it doesn't let me remove my last account saying something about data files and all. How do I nuke Outlook and start afresh? I'm using Outlook 2013
4 Answers
To ensure you get a complete reset, uninstall it, delete the data files and reinstall.
Here are instructions to help if you need them; Install or remove individual Office programs and components
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6By default the data files are located at
%USERPROFILE%\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook
. Check out Locating the Outlook data files. Mar 29, 2013 at 14:14 -
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Re-installing is waste of time...
just go to control panel>>mail(32bit)>>show profiles>delete all profiles here.
then open the outlook, you will be opening an fresh account.
NOTE:1.before deleting don't forget to take mail backup.
NOTE:2. On windows 8, 8.1 and 10 you can use windows + x and select Control Panel.
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1Here on Windows 8.1 Mail does not show up, not even in the search. I have to switch to Category View and then go to User Accounts and Family Safety and there I have a Mail icon. ?-) Jun 26, 2015 at 7:12
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1This worked after hours of debugging issues with Outlook, including a Repair. Can't believe this config isn't accessible within Outlook itself. Jul 13, 2020 at 23:21
Shockingly, you can delete all your profiles and even uninstall, reboot, and reinstall Outlook and still have nasty issues that linger.
Some stuff that will not be reset includes....
- Any VBA scrips
- Any ribbon bar customizations
- The database of which emails have already been downloaded via POP3
...and lots of other stuff that can haunt you.
To completely reset Outlook, you must....
- Uninstall the Outlook application
- Delete all the profiles
- Delete the tree under the registry key
[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Office]
(or you can go in and only delete the sub-trees for your Outlook version if you want to keep state for other Office applications) - Delete (or rename to a .bak) the folder
C:\Users\[your user name]\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Office
or%localappdata%\Microsoft\Office
- Delete (or rename to a .bak) the folder
C:\Users\[your user name]\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Office
or%appdata%\Microsoft\Office
- Delete (or just don't use) the previous PST file.
I only know all this because I had a nasty problem where Outlook started downloading messages over POP3 and then deleting them. Deleting all profiles, PST files, and uninstalling/reinstalling did not solve the problem. Only after following all the above steps did the problem go away. I still can't figure out exactly where the POP3 messages database is actually stored.
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I tried this and hit a snag. Even a system restore wouldn't recover it properly. It got stuck on 'Profile loading' following re-install. At that point, I had to open in it safe mode (run > outlook.exe /safe) and set up a new profile as detailed here - intowindows.com/… Jul 13, 2017 at 10:40
In the recent versions of Outlook the Mail option in the Control Panel has been removed. Even so, you can use the /profiles
switch for outlook.exe
to open the Outlook Mail Profiles window even if Outlook accounts are hosed.
Run outlook.exe /profiles
from the start menu to open the Profile selection window. Now click options
then delete
. If warned about data loss you'll need to confirm removal. Repeat for any other profiles.
If you want to remove the PST, OST & NK2 files (effectively all your data so caveat emptor) you can delete them from the folders:
%LOCALAPPDATA%\Microsoft\Outlook
%USERPROFILE%\Documents\Outlook Files
Now re-open Outlook and you'll be prompted to create a new profile and add an email address to it.
The entire process can be completed in under 5 minutes, but you'll then need to re-download all your email so expect that to take some time for people with large mail archives.