Microsoft announced the dates leading to the final retirement of Exchange Web Services from Exchange Online. If all goes well, the EWS retirement in the cloud will happen by May 2027. Challenges still exist. Microsoft must remove EWS from its own apps, including Outlook, and help tenants and ISVs make the leap to Graph APIs. Plans are in place and progress is being made, but will everyone be ready when Microsoft removes EWS permanently from Exchange Online in April 2027?
A new userConfiguration API is available to retrieve data from Folder Associated Items (FAIs) in Exchange mailboxes. The new Graph API is part of the EWS migration project and is intended to allow application developers to migrate EWS code that updates FAIs with Graph equivalents. Most Microsoft 365 tenants will never use this API, but it’s nice to know how things work.
A December 2 announcement says that Exchange Online will block access to Exchange Web Services for users with kiosk or frontline worker licenses from June 2026. In fact, the Exchange Online service description has always excluded EWS access for these licenses, but the necessary code to enforce the exclusion was never implemented. It will be in March. Time to check licenses…
Microsoft launched the preview of the Exchange Admin API on November 17. The new API is intended to close known feature gaps that exist in the Graph APIs and allow developers to migrate from EWS before Microsoft retires EWS in October 2026. Think of the Exchange Admin API as a discardable time-limited API that allows clients to submit cmdlets for processing. It’s certainly one way to approach the EWS problem!
Microsoft will retire Exchange Web Services (EWS) from Exchange Online on October 1, 2026. A new usage report helps tenants understand what apps use EWS. Many of the apps are likely to be first-party (Microsoft) apps, but some might be third-party apps developed externally or internally. Those apps need to be retired or upgraded to use Graph APIs. Time is slipping away to do the work.
Exchange Web Services (EWS) will retire in October 2026. Tenants that still need to use EWS must explicitly set EWSEnabled to true in the organization configuration. If they don’t, the previous rule that allows mailboxes enabled for EWS to function won’t work. The change is part of the preparation for the phase-out of EWS. To help, we’ve written a script to send email to administrators listing accounts still enabled for EWS.
On September 19, 2023 Microsoft announced their intention to retire the Exchange Web Services API on 1 October 2026. The suggested replacement is the Microsoft Graph API. Microsoft acknowledges that some gaps exist that they need to close before EWS retirement happens, but one big issue they didn’t discuss is what happens to the backup products that currently use EWS to backup Exchange Online.
In a July 12 announcement, Microsoft says that they will restrict the use of Exchange Web Services to access Teams message data from September 30. Microsoft wants customers to use the Teams Export API instead. All that’s fine, but it means that customers have to change their Teams backup product to one that uses the new API – and they’ll be charged for the privilege of using the Export API.
A Microsoft October 5 announcement gives a clear signal that Exchange Web Services is on a short runway to oblivion. The first step is the removal of 25 APIs on March 31, 2022. It’s all part of the master plan to get Office 365 tenants and ISVs to move to the Microsoft Graph APIs. This is a perfectly laudable ambition but it’s complicated because of the lack of suitable Graph APIs to handle the volume of Exchange data involved in scenarios like backup/restore and migration. Teams has a new Graph Export API, but it introduces consumption metering and charging. Is a new Exchange API coming and will it use the same charging mechanism? We live in interesting times…
Many migration projects use Exchange Web Services (EWS) to move data to Exchange Online. EWS is using throttled to preserve resources. Here’s how to lift the restrictions for up to 90 days, all without going near a support call.
Covid-19 dealt a blow to Microsoft’s plans to remove basic authentication from 5 connection protocols for Exchange Online and forced them to postpone the removal from October 13, 2020 to sometime in the second quarter of 2021. The news is disappointing because basic authentication is a weakness exploited by many hackers. But you can’t plan for a pandemic and Office 365 tenants need more time to be ready for the deprecation.
Microsoft plans to disable basic authentication for five Exchange Online connection protocols on October 13, 2020. They’ve been clear on this point for several months and are now moving to deliver tools and provide guidance about what people should do about clients that use basic auth connections with Exchange Web Services, Exchange ActiveSync, IMAP4, POP3, and Remote PowerShell. Work is needed to make sure that clients are prepared for the switchover to modern authentication.
Microsoft has announced that basic authentication for multiple email connection protocols won’t be supported after October 13, 2020. You won’t be able to connect with EWS, EAS, IMAP4, POP3, or Remote PowerShell unless you use modern authentication. There’s just over a year to prepare, but there’s some work to be done.