Would strongly suggest looking at the options available from the folks at Fookes Software which makes the process very simple and quick - anything else is a contorted process
Export mail from Thunderbird to Outlook
http://www.aid4mail.com/export-thunderbird-to-outlook.php
(note - have no vested interest in Fookes or its products - this is merely provided as information only. Have only seen good reviews from people who've used Aid4Mail to migrate from TBird to Outlook)
- Edited by Jon Hunstock Saturday, August 04, 2012 7:00 PM
- Edited by Jon Hunstock Saturday, August 04, 2012 7:00 PM
- Edited by Jon Hunstock Saturday, August 04, 2012 7:00 PM
- Edited by Jon Hunstock Saturday, August 04, 2012 7:00 PM
Hello,
You can transfer Thunderbird emails files into Outlook with the help of a MBOX to PST Converter Tool,With this utility, the user can convert multiple MBOX files in a single conversion cycle. It converts all the emails, attachments, sent items, drafts, deleted items, etc with great precision and without hampering the originality of data i.e. the formatting, structure and properties of email data items.You can get more information about this tool from here http://www.mboxtopst.org/ hope this information help you .
If you dont have any idea that how to transfer emails from Thunderbird to Outlook then I suggest you very safe and secure Thunderbird to Outlook converter utility that can transfer Thunderbird emails to Outlook without any data loss. Using this Converter application you never lose your precious Thunderbird Emails when you perform this transfer procedure. Get further information please click on: http://www.thunderbird.mboxtooutlook.org/
Due to some reason if you want to transfer Thunderbird emails to Outlook but generally this procedure is a little bit confusing and complicated. But Thunderbird to Outlook converter application makes this task very simple and easy. So using this significant software user can transfer the entire data without losing previous data. Get more information visit:
- Proposed as answer by robertbrownsmithBanned Friday, January 03, 2014 9:32 AM
- Unproposed as answer by robertbrownsmithBanned Friday, January 03, 2014 9:32 AM
- Proposed as answer by robertbrownsmithBanned Friday, January 03, 2014 9:32 AM
- Unproposed as answer by robertbrownsmithBanned Friday, January 03, 2014 9:32 AM
- Proposed as answer by robertbrownsmithBanned Friday, January 03, 2014 9:32 AM
- Unproposed as answer by robertbrownsmithBanned Friday, January 03, 2014 9:32 AM
- Proposed as answer by robertbrownsmith Friday, January 03, 2014 9:32 AM
- Unproposed as answer by robertbrownsmith Friday, January 03, 2014 9:32 AM
You can use the Thunderbird Converter Tool, it is superb solution to convert Thunderbird to Outlook without missing any data. Its conversion processing is amazing and also supports batch approach for instant process. I handled previously so I am sure that it is exact Thunderbird to Outlook Conversion solution for you and everyone.
The Thunderbird Converter also offers free trial edition to try its processing so first try it then decide to go for complete conversion with licensed key. read more - http://www.catasoftware.com/thunderbird-converter/
- Proposed as answer by robertbrownsmith Friday, January 03, 2014 9:32 AM
The easiest way is the baby step route-- at least you will not need to buy any software (or load any malware).
1. Get an IMAP email account somewhere. The only free version I know of is through Google, although if you have a web server somewhere you probably can get an IMAP account there. Set this IMAP account up on Outlook: it's easy to do and both Google and Microsoft have help pages to walk you through it. If you need help, Bing or Google this subject, followed by either "site:google.com" or "site:microsoft.com" in the search box. Also, set this account up on your Thunderbird mail client as well.
Now you should have both identical IMAP accounts set up, on Outlook and Thunderbird. Make sure you have sync'd both to the server when choosing options, so your client computer and server both mirror one another.
(Of course, if your Thunderbird account was an IMAP account to start with and not a POP account, you could avoid setting up another account and instead simply set that up on Outlook without any conversion, so I'm assuming you are inquiring about a POP account in Thunderbird. If you have an IMAP account in Thunderbird sync'd to the server, all you would need to do is to set that account up in Outlook, and all your mail will show up by itself, after a pause).
2. In the POP Thunderbird account, just drag all your folders from your old account over to the new IMAP account, which also exists on Outlook. (I do this all the time by the way, move folders between various mail accounts that exist on both clients.)
So now all your folders will show up in Outlook on your new IMAP account and can be dragged, copied, deleted to any other Outlook mail account. One caveat that people (me) sometimes overlook if new to IMAP: they still need to do .pst backups, even though the server/client are sync'd. If one accidentally deletes a file or a folder, say from a Unix type system, or corrupts files by some other route, it can still be lost--so back-ups are very necessary.
Any address books in Thunderbird will need to be moved separately, in an exported file.
Hope this helps. I do stuff like this all the time by the way, it's helpful especially when I have to convert a very old program or 'can't get there from here,' to go to some intermediate destination.
- Edited by houseboy Saturday, December 21, 2013 2:04 AM
The easiest way is the baby step route-- at least you will not need to buy any software (or load any malware).
1. Get an IMAP email account somewhere. The only free version I know of is through Google, although if you have a web server somewhere you probably can get an IMAP account there. Set this IMAP account up on Outlook: it's easy to do and both Google and Microsoft have help pages to walk you through it. If you need help, Bing or Google this subject, followed by either "site:google.com" or "site:microsoft.com" in the search box. Also, set this account up on your Thunderbird mail client as well.
Now you should have both identical IMAP accounts set up, on Outlook and Thunderbird. Make sure you have sync'd both to the server when choosing options, so your client computer and server both mirror one another.
(Of course, if your Thunderbird account was an IMAP account to start with and not a POP account, you could avoid setting up another account and instead simply set that up on Outlook without any conversion, so I'm assuming you are inquiring about a POP account in Thunderbird. If you have an IMAP account in Thunderbird sync'd to the server, all you would need to do is to set that account up in Outlook, and all your mail will show up by itself, after a pause).
2. In the POP Thunderbird account, just drag all your folders from your old account over to the new IMAP account, which also exists on Outlook. (I do this all the time by the way, move folders between various mail accounts that exist on both clients.)
So now all your folders will show up in Outlook on your new IMAP account and can be dragged, copied, deleted to any other Outlook mail account. One caveat that people (me) sometimes overlook if new to IMAP: they still need to do .pst backups, even though the server/client are sync'd. If one accidentally deletes a file or a folder, say from a Unix type system, or corrupts files by some other route, it can still be lost--so back-ups are very necessary.
Any address books in Thunderbird will need to be moved separately, in an exported file.
Hope this helps. I do stuff like this all the time by the way, it's helpful especially when I have to convert a very old program or 'can't get there from here,' to go to some intermediate destination.
- Edited by houseboy Saturday, December 21, 2013 2:04 AM
The easiest way is the baby step route-- at least you will not need to buy any software (or load any malware).
1. Get an IMAP email account somewhere. The only free version I know of is through Google, although if you have a web server somewhere you probably can get an IMAP account there. Set this IMAP account up on Outlook: it's easy to do and both Google and Microsoft have help pages to walk you through it. If you need help, Bing or Google this subject, followed by either "site:google.com" or "site:microsoft.com" in the search box. Also, set this account up on your Thunderbird mail client as well.
Now you should have both identical IMAP accounts set up, on Outlook and Thunderbird. Make sure you have sync'd both to the server when choosing options, so your client computer and server both mirror one another.
(Of course, if your Thunderbird account was an IMAP account to start with and not a POP account, you could avoid setting up another account and instead simply set that up on Outlook without any conversion, so I'm assuming you are inquiring about a POP account in Thunderbird. If you have an IMAP account in Thunderbird sync'd to the server, all you would need to do is to set that account up in Outlook, and all your mail will show up by itself, after a pause).
2. In the POP Thunderbird account, just drag all your folders from your old account over to the new IMAP account, which also exists on Outlook. (I do this all the time by the way, move folders between various mail accounts that exist on both clients.)
So now all your folders will show up in Outlook on your new IMAP account and can be dragged, copied, deleted to any other Outlook mail account. One caveat that people (me) sometimes overlook if new to IMAP: they still need to do .pst backups, even though the server/client are sync'd. If one accidentally deletes a file or a folder, say from a Unix type system, or corrupts files by some other route, it can still be lost--so back-ups are very necessary.
Any address books in Thunderbird will need to be moved separately, in an exported file.
Hope this helps. I do stuff like this all the time by the way, it's helpful especially when I have to convert a very old program or 'can't get there from here,' to go to some intermediate destination.
- Edited by houseboy Saturday, December 21, 2013 2:04 AM
The easiest way is the baby step route-- at least you will not need to buy any software (or load any malware).
1. Get an IMAP email account somewhere. The only free version I know of is through Google, although if you have a web server somewhere you probably can get an IMAP account there. Set this IMAP account up on Outlook: it's easy to do and both Google and Microsoft have help pages to walk you through it. If you need help, Bing or Google this subject, followed by either "site:google.com" or "site:microsoft.com" in the search box. Also, set this account up on your Thunderbird mail client as well.
Now you should have both identical IMAP accounts set up, on Outlook and Thunderbird. Make sure you have sync'd both to the server when choosing options, so your client computer and server both mirror one another.
(Of course, if your Thunderbird account was an IMAP account to start with and not a POP account, you could avoid setting up another account and instead simply set that up on Outlook without any conversion, so I'm assuming you are inquiring about a POP account in Thunderbird. If you have an IMAP account in Thunderbird sync'd to the server, all you would need to do is to set that account up in Outlook, and all your mail will show up by itself, after a pause).
2. In the POP Thunderbird account, just drag all your folders from your old account over to the new IMAP account, which also exists on Outlook. (I do this all the time by the way, move folders between various mail accounts that exist on both clients.)
So now all your folders will show up in Outlook on your new IMAP account and can be dragged, copied, deleted to any other Outlook mail account. One caveat that people (me) sometimes overlook if new to IMAP: they still need to do .pst backups, even though the server/client are sync'd. If one accidentally deletes a file or a folder, say from a Unix type system, or corrupts files by some other route, it can still be lost--so back-ups are very necessary.
Any address books in Thunderbird will need to be moved separately, in an exported file.
Hope this helps. I do stuff like this all the time by the way, it's helpful especially when I have to convert a very old program or 'can't get there from here,' to go to some intermediate destination.
- Edited by houseboy Saturday, December 21, 2013 2:04 AM
For complete data safety while transfer Thunderbird emails (EML files) to Outlook 2007/2010 I am recommending you to use the expedient EML to PST Converter Software. It is ample solution to retain all real aspect as it is and avoids data lose. As last week I have got this solution kit from Google, downloaded free app for assessment. During trial I have observe that it converts 10 items free of cost. Follow it and try- http://www.emlviewer.org/emltopst.html
- Proposed as answer by JennieS Wednesday, February 05, 2014 4:25 AM
Yes! Using Thunderbird Converter, you can solve your trouble without losing any data. It can perfectly convert Thunderbird files to Outlook with attachments, formatting, unread status, etc. The software also supports entire Outlook edition - 2010, 2007, 2013, 2003, etc and also work with Batch conversion mode to quickly convert entire Thunderbird files into Outlook 2010/2007. Read More>>
http://www.thunderbirdtooutlook2010.catasoftware.com/
http://www.migratethunderbirdtooutlook.catasoftware.com/
- Proposed as answer by macalla Saturday, April 19, 2014 10:14 AM
MBOX to PST Converter is an easy-to-use email migration tool that converts MBOX files of Thunderbird, Spicebird, MacLiveMail, Mulberry, OperaMail, SeaMonkey, MozillaMail, Entourage, Pocomail, Eudora, Netscape, Evolution, Sylpheed, ClawsMail, Cone, Mutt files and Gnu Mail files to '.PST' files. For more information:-
http://www.filesrecoverytool.com/mbox-to-pst-converter.html |
I have 2 computers here in the office that have Thunderbird install on them and my boss would like for them to be transferred over to Outlook 2007/2010 with out any data loss. Every thing I have read has inform me that there could be some data loss. Is there any way to do a complete data transfer without lossing any data to Outlook 2010 without usin
For Thunderbird to Outlook Conversion, you can also try to use a very effective and advanced MBOX to PST conversion application from http://www.mboxtopstconvert.recoveryfiles.org/ . With this smartly programed tool, you can easily transfer or move Thunderbird data to Outlook PST format. For more visit
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBizpQO_nWY&feature=youtu.be
Hi, sorry for being late with my response.
If you are using MS Outlook 2010 or earlier edition that time you can use drag and drop method. For that you first need to select required messages from Mozilla Thunderbird drag all them and drop to a folder on your PC. In this way each message will be saved in .eml extension which is also supported by MS Outlook 2010, 2013 and 2016. Now select EML files and drag them to MS Outlook folder.
This method is helpful for migrating a few messages and will consume more time for number of messages. So you can also use a Thunderbird to Outlook conversion tool.