How to Set Up Shared Mailboxes So Nothing Falls Through the Cracks
February 10, 2026 by AddisonIT IT Solutions
Shared mailbox setup is rarely the reason emails are missed. In most businesses, they happen because inboxes are shared without structure, responsibility is unclear, and no one knows what happens after an email arrives.
In Microsoft 365 , it works extremely well. But only when they are set up with clear rules, limited access, and an agreed way of working. Without that, they quickly become a liability.
This is a practical, step-by-step guide to setting up shared mailboxes so messages are seen, owned, and actioned. It is written for busy managers who need things to work, not just exist.
Key points
- Shared mailboxes solve visibility, not accountability
- Every shared mailbox needs a clear owner
- Access and permissions should be deliberate
- If emails need tracking or deadlines, use a different tool
What shared mailboxes are actually for
A shared mailbox is designed to give multiple people access to a single business email address, such as accounts, enquiries, or admin. It allows a team to see incoming messages and reply from the same address without relying on one person.
Used properly, a shared mailbox helps when:
- Someone is away or leaves the business
- More than one role needs visibility
- The address belongs to the business, not an individual
What it is not designed to do is manage workload, track progress, or enforce response times. Those problems require process, not just an inbox.
Step 1: Decide whether a shared mailbox is the right tool
Before creating anything, ask one simple question.
Does this inbox require tracking, deadlines, or reporting?
If the answer is yes, a shared mailbox is the wrong solution. Shared mailboxes do not show who owns an email, what stage it is at, or whether it was handled on time.
Shared mailboxes work best for:
- Low to moderate email volume
- Simple enquiries
- Messages that can be handled quickly
They are a poor fit for:
- Customer support
- Requests with service levels
- Anything requiring hand-offs or approvals
If tracking matters, use a ticketing system or task-based workflow instead.
Step 2: Create the shared mailbox with a clear purpose
Every shared mailbox should have a defined role.
Before setup, write one sentence that answers:
- What emails should arrive here
- What emails should not
For example: “This inbox receives supplier invoices and finance-related queries only.”
If you cannot describe the purpose clearly, the inbox will become cluttered quickly.
Step 3: Assign a single accountable owner
This is the most important step.
Every shared mailbox must have one owner.
The owner is not responsible for replying to every email. They are responsible for making sure every email is handled.
The owner’s role includes:
- Monitoring incoming messages
- Making sure nothing is missed
- Maintaining rules, categories, and access
- Reviewing whether the inbox is still fit for purpose
Without a named owner, shared mailboxes fail. Messages sit untouched because everyone assumes someone else has it.

Step 4: Set access and permissions properly
More access does not mean better coverage.
Only give access to people who need it to perform their role. Avoid adding users “just in case”. Over time, this creates noise and increases risk.
Good practice includes:
- Grant access based on role, not convenience
- Remove access when roles change, or staff leave
- Avoid automatically adding the inbox to everyone’s Outlook
From a governance perspective, fewer people with access makes it easier to understand who can see and send what.
Step 5: Agree on how emails are handled
A shared mailbox without rules is just a larger inbox.
Teams should agree on:
- Who responds to which types of emails
- How ownership is shown
- What “done” looks like
Simple approaches work best, such as:
- Categories like new, in progress, and completed
- Flags or tasks for follow-up
- Clear internal guidelines on response expectations
These are process decisions, not technical ones.
Step 6: Review and maintain the mailbox
Shared mailboxes need regular attention.
At a minimum:
- Review access quarterly
- Remove outdated rules and folders
- Check whether the inbox still has a clear purpose
- Include it in onboarding and offboarding processes
As businesses grow, inboxes that were once manageable often become risk points if they are not reviewed.
When to stop using a shared mailbox
Here is a simple rule.
If you need to ask who is handling an email, the inbox is no longer fit for purpose.
At that point, the issue is not training or discipline. It is the wrong tool.
Moving to a system that shows ownership and progress reduces pressure on staff and removes guesswork.
How we help businesses get this right
Shared mailboxes are a common part of Microsoft 365, but without the right structure, they often introduce more risk than clarity. Set up properly, they can support smoother operations and reduce pressure on busy teams.
At AddisonIT, we work with organisations to review how email is actually used day to day. We help put clear ownership, sensible access controls, and simple ways of working around shared mailboxes, and we guide teams toward better-fit tools within Microsoft 365 when inboxes are no longer suitable.
If you want fewer missed messages and more confidence that communication is being handled properly, our team can help you get there.
Frequently asked questions
1. What is the difference between a shared mailbox and a distribution list?
A shared mailbox allows multiple people to read and reply from the same address. A distribution list only forwards emails to individual inboxes and provides no shared visibility.
2. How many people should have access to a shared mailbox?
Only those who need it for their role. Fewer users make responsibility clearer and reduce risk.
3. Can shared mailboxes be used for customer support?
Only at very low volumes. Once response times and tracking matter, a dedicated support system is more reliable.
4. Who should own a shared mailbox?
One person should be accountable, typically the role most closely tied to the inbox’s purpose.
5. How often should shared mailboxes be reviewed?
At least quarterly, and whenever staff or responsibilities change.
Author
AddisonIT IT Solutions
AddisonIT is a leading Australian managed IT services provider, helping businesses across industries improve performance, boost security, and scale confidently through smart, reliable technology. With a passion for efficiency, security, and client success, our local team delivers expert support, enterprise-grade solutions, and a no-nonsense approach to IT. We empower small and mid-sized businesses with future-proof systems, robust cybersecurity, and seamless support—so technology becomes an asset, not a headache.