
An email signature works like a digital business card — your name, title, contact details, and logo appearing automatically at the bottom of every message you send.
Outlook supports signatures across all platforms:
- Outlook for Mac
- Outlook mobile (iOS and Android)
- Classic Outlook (Windows desktop)
- Outlook on the web (browser-based)
- New Outlook (Windows, syncs with web)
The setup process takes about two minutes. You can create multiple signatures (one for new messages, a shorter one for replies) and set them to insert automatically or add them manually when needed.
What should your signature include?
Effective signatures balance professionalism with brevity. Include enough information to be useful without overwhelming the recipient.
| Component | Purpose | Example |
| Full name | Identity | John Smith |
| Title/position | Professional context | Marketing Director |
| Company name | Organization | Acme Corporation |
| Phone number | Contact option | +1 (555) 123-4567 |
| Email address | Useful for forwarded emails | john@acme.com |
| Website | Drive traffic | www.acme.com |
| Logo | Visual branding | Company logo |
| Social links | Additional engagement | LinkedIn icon |
The must-haves are name, title, company, and phone. Everything else depends on your needs — a logo adds visual polish, social links extend your reach, and a website gives recipients somewhere to learn more.
Stick with professional closings like “Regards,” “Thank you,” or “Best” rather than casual phrases. First impressions form quickly, and signatures shape how recipients perceive you before they’ve read a word.
How do you add a signature in Classic Outlook (Windows)?
Classic Outlook offers two paths to the same signature settings. Pick whichever feels more natural.
File menu path
- Open Outlook
- Click File > Options
- Select Mail in the left sidebar
- Click the Signatures button
- Click New, enter a signature name
- Type and format your signature in the editor
- Set defaults for New messages and Replies/forwards
- Click OK to save
Message ribbon path
- Open a new email message
- Click the Insert tab (or Message tab)
- Click Signature > Signatures
- Click New, enter a signature name
- Type and format your signature in the editor
- Set defaults for your email account
- Click OK to save
One quirk worth knowing: the first email you open after creating a signature won’t include it automatically. You’ll need to insert it manually that one time. Every message after that will have your signature applied based on your default settings.
How do you add a signature in New Outlook and Outlook on the web?
New Outlook for Windows and the browser-based version share the same interface — and the same signature settings. Create your signature once, and it syncs between both.
- Click the Settings gear (top right corner)
- Select Accounts > Signatures
- Click + New signature (or Add signature)
- Enter a signature name
- Type and format your content
- Set defaults for New messages and Replies/forwards
- Click Save
If you use both Classic Outlook and New Outlook (or the web version), you’ll need to create signatures in both places. They don’t sync with each other — Classic stores signatures locally, while New Outlook and web share cloud-based settings.
How do you add a signature in Outlook for Mac?
Mac has its own signature preferences, accessed through the Outlook menu rather than File.
- Open Outlook
- Click Outlook menu > Preferences
- Select Signatures
- Click the + button to add a new signature
- Enter a name and compose your signature
- Assign to your account and set defaults
- Close preferences to save
The Mac editor offers similar formatting options to Windows — fonts, colors, images, and links all work the same way.
How do you add a signature in Outlook mobile?
The mobile process is streamlined but more limited in what you can format.
- Tap your profile icon (top left)
- Tap the Settings gear
- Scroll down to Signature
- Delete the default text (“Sent from Outlook”)
- Type your new signature
- Tap the back arrow to save
Mobile signatures are device-specific — they won’t sync with your desktop settings. You’ll also have fewer formatting options (basic text styling and links, but no images or complex layouts). For most people, a simple text signature with name, title, and phone works fine on mobile.
What formatting options are available?
Formatting capabilities vary significantly across platforms.
| Feature | Classic Outlook | New Outlook/Web | Mobile |
| Font style/size | Yes | Yes | Limited |
| Font color | Yes | Yes | No |
| Bold/italic/underline | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Text alignment | Yes | Yes | No |
| Hyperlinks | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Images/logos | Yes | Yes | No |
| Tables | Yes (via Word) | Limited | No |
| Borders | Yes (via Word) | No | No |
Advanced formatting
For complex signatures with tables, borders, or precise layouts, the built-in editor falls short (it’s admittedly finicky with anything beyond basics).
The workaround is to create your design in Microsoft Word first, then copy and paste into the Outlook signature editor. Word gives you far more control over spacing, alignment, and visual elements.
Adding images
- In the signature editor, click the Image icon
- Select your image file
- Right-click the image > Picture
- Adjust size (keep “Lock aspect ratio” checked)
- Click OK
Always maintain the aspect ratio when resizing — stretched or squished logos look amateur. If your logo appears too large, resize the actual file before inserting rather than relying on the editor’s sizing controls.
How do you set automatic signature insertion?
Default settings save time by inserting your signature without any extra clicks.
| Setting | Options | What it does |
| New messages | Select signature or (none) | Auto-insert on fresh emails |
| Replies/forwards | Select signature or (none) | Auto-insert on responses |
| Email account | Select which account | Ties signature to specific account |
Multiple signatures
You can create several signatures for different situations — a common approach that keeps emails appropriate for their context.
| Signature type | When to use | What to include |
| Full/formal | New messages to clients | Complete contact info, logo, CTA |
| Abbreviated | Replies and forwards | Name, title, phone only |
| Internal | Messages to colleagues | Just name and extension |
| Promotional | Campaign periods | Banner or special offer link |
Using a shorter signature for replies prevents your full contact block from cluttering ongoing threads. Recipients don’t need your logo and LinkedIn link repeated twelve times in a conversation.
What design mistakes should you avoid?
A few common errors undermine otherwise professional signatures.
| Mistake | Why it’s a problem |
| Image-only signature | If the image fails to load, the entire signature invisible |
| Animated GIFs | May not display on all devices, looks unprofessional |
| Too many CTAs | If the image fails to load, the entire signature is invisible |
| Excessive colors/fonts | Cluttered appearance, hard to read |
| Overly long signature | Takes up too much email real estate |
| VML tags for images | Images appear as attachments, not inline |
The image-only mistake deserves emphasis. Many people design beautiful signatures in Canva, export them as a single image, and insert them. The problem is that email clients frequently block images by default. When that happens, recipients see a blank space where your contact information should be. Keep essential text as actual text — not embedded in graphics.
Troubleshooting
Common issues have straightforward fixes.
| Issue | Cause | Solution |
| Signature not appearing | Not set as default | Check default settings in signature options |
| Missing on first email | Classic Outlook quirk | Configure mobile signature independently in the app |
| Image not displaying | File path broken or blocked | Manually insert into that initial message |
| Formatting lost | Pasted from Word incorrectly | Use “Keep Source Formatting” when pasting |
| Signature too large | Oversized image files | Resize images before inserting |
| Different on mobile | Separate settings | Configure mobile signature independently in app |
Frequently asked questions
Here are some commonly asked questions on this topic:
Yes. In signature settings, you can assign specific signatures to each email account you’ve added to Outlook. Each account gets its own defaults for new messages and replies — useful if you manage work and personal accounts in the same client.
Only partially. New Outlook and Outlook on the web share signatures (create once, available on both). Classic Outlook stores signatures locally on your computer. Mac and mobile each have their own separate settings. If you work across multiple platforms, you’ll need to set up signatures on each one individually.
Type the text you want linked (like “Visit our website”), select it, then click the hyperlink button in the formatting toolbar. Enter the URL in the dialog box. The text becomes clickable — recipients can jump directly to your site, LinkedIn profile, or booking calendar.

