Microsoft 365 has been DISABLED: Hundreds of Brits can no longer access their emails in Outlook

Microsoft 365 is offline this morning, with hundreds of reports flooding Down Detector.

These issues appear to have started around 09:00 GMT and are affecting users across the UK.

The majority of the issues seem to be related to Outlook, while others have reported issues with server connection and login.

Microsoft has acknowledged the outage and said it is “investigating the issue.”

“We are investigating an issue impacting users attempting to access Exchange Online or functionality in the Microsoft Teams calendar,” it tweeted.

‘For more information, please refer to MO941162 in the admin center.’

To date, more than 800 issues have been registered with Down Detector.

Of those who reported problems, 87 percent said they struggled with Outlook, while 10 percent reported an issue with the server connection.

The remaining three percent said the problem was logging in.

Microsoft 365 is offline this morning, with hundreds of reports flooding Down Detector

Of those who reported problems, 87 percent said they struggled with Outlook, while 10 percent reported an issue with the server connection

Of those who reported problems, 87 percent said they struggled with Outlook, while 10 percent reported an issue with the server connection

In a statement about

In a statement about

Currently the issues appear to be largely limited to UK users, but some social media users from France, the Netherlands, Poland and Sweden also wrote to X saying they were experiencing issues.

On

However, you need an authorized administrator account to access the admin center.

Several users have flocked to X (formerly Twitter) to discuss this morning’s outage.

‘Been having trouble all morning, exchanging online, teams, prospects, none of these services are working as expected, also can’t get in to see quarantined emails. Your services are a joke right now,” one user tweeted.

Another added: “The prospects on a Monday morning must be some sick joke.”

And someone posted a GIF of a chimpanzee thrashing around its cage, writing, “What it feels like when the bane of my existence (Microsoft Outlook) won’t even open.”

Many users also joked that the outage of regular office software would give them at least a few minutes of free time this morning.

On X (formerly Twitter), commenters took to social media to express their frustration over the outage. Many complained that the disruption in services left them unable to work

On X (formerly Twitter), commenters took to social media to express their frustration over the outage. Many complained that the disruption in services left them unable to work

One commenter called the outage a 'sick twisted joke'

One commenter called the outage a ‘sick twisted joke’

One commenter joked that the outage of the popular office software meant there was time for a coffee break

One commenter joked that the outage of the popular office software meant there was time for a coffee break

One commenter wrote: ‘What a fantastic way to start the week. Coffee, anyone?’

“Maybe Outlook Office will stay offline forever and we’ll all walk off into the sunset together,” another added.

While one commenter wrote: ‘Microsoft 365 outage: blessing or curse for office workers?’

Microsoft has not yet commented on the cause of the outage or how long the disruption is expected to last.

However, reports of disruptions on Down Detector appear to have subsided from their previous peak.

As of 10:40 GMT, there were 647 reports of issues with Microsoft 365, up from 860 two hours earlier.

This latest outage comes just four months after Microsoft suffered an outage described as the “worst IT outage the world has ever seen.”

The outage affected supermarkets, banks, telecoms companies, streaming services and PCs, with airports, railways and GP practices also reporting problems.

Commenter went to X to vent because the issue prevented them from accessing emails or calendar information

Commenter went to X to vent because the issue prevented them from accessing emails or calendar information

It later emerged that the problems were caused by a glitch in the Crowdstrike cybersecurity service used by Microsoft.

The Microsoft outage was caused by a bug in the Crowdstrike software update, which was implemented in the ‘Falcon Sensor’, which searches for viruses and malicious attacks.

The resulting disruption left millions of passengers stranded at airports, while major airlines grounded their planes.

MailOnline has contacted Microsoft for comment.