Alternatively, you can navigate to aka. ms/CloseAccount in your browser.

When you create a Microsoft account, your login will usually begin with your username and end with @outlook. com, @live. com, or @hotmail. com. If you associated it with a different email account, such as your business domain or Gmail address, use that address to log in.

When you create a Microsoft account, your login will usually begin with your username and end with @outlook. com, @live. com, or @hotmail. com. If you associated it with a different email account, such as your business domain or Gmail address, use that address to log in.

If you haven’t already taken any of the steps recommended on the page (such as canceling subscriptions, spending your remaining account balance(s), and turning off reset protection), consider doing so before you continue. You will have a grace period of 60 days before your account is permanently closed. To change it to 30, click the drop-down menu and select 30.

You’ll lose access to Skype, Azure, Hotmail, Outlook. com, Office 365, OneDrive, MSN Money, Outlook. com, Hotmail, and any other products you use with this account. You won’t be able to use Office 365 products such as Word or Excel. Apps, music, games, and software purchased through the Microsoft Store with this account will be permanently lost. You’ll lose any Xbox game data saved to this account, including saved games, in-game purchases, Xbox Game Pass, Live Gold, and Mixer Pro. Devices using this account may lose proper functionality.

If you decide not to continue because you’ll lose access to too many products, consider creating a new account without closing the old one. [2] X Research source This gives you a chance to start fresh with a new email address without losing access to all of your old products.

You will see a confirmation and date of when your account will be closed permanently.

If you change your mind within the grace period, you can reactivate your account, but you will lose your data. After this time, your account will be completely deleted and someone else can sign up with your former ID. To ensure that you don’t accidentally sign back into your Microsoft account, make sure you sign out of anywhere you’re typically signed in. There are plenty of ways to contact Microsoft if you have any trouble with this process.