Processes in Microsoft 365 for setting up Office apps, redeeming product keys, and activating licenses.
Dear @Gwen Dougherty,
Good day, and I appreciate the clear explanation of your concern. I understand that you currently have a Microsoft 365 business account and would like to use a second work email address with a different domain name. This is absolutely supported in Microsoft 365 and I am happy to outline the available options so you can choose what best fits your needs.
Before using any email address on a new domain, that domain must first be added and verified in your Microsoft 365 tenant by an administrator. Once that is complete, there are several ways to proceed, depending on whether you want the email to use the same inbox or a separate one.
Option 1: Use one inbox and add the second address as an alias
This option is best if you want all email to arrive in the same mailbox and you want the ability to send from the second address. No additional license is required.
Sign in to the Microsoft 365 admin center as an administrator.
Go to Settings, then Domains, and select Add domain.
Add the new domain and verify ownership by completing the required DNS records at your domain registrar.
After the domain is verified, go to Users, then Active users, and select your user account.
Choose Manage username and email, then add a new alias using the new domain.
Note: Aliases share the same inbox, calendar and storage. Replies sent from the alias will only work after the send from alias setting is enabled and has finished propagating.
Add a custom domain to Microsoft 365 - Microsoft 365 admin | Microsoft Learn
Connect your domain by adding DNS records - Microsoft 365 admin | Microsoft Learn
Option 2: Create a separate mailbox using the second domain
This option is best if you want a fully independent inbox, calendar, rules, and storage. This option requires an additional Microsoft 365 license.
Ensure the new domain has already been added and verified in the Microsoft 365 admin center.
Go to Users, then Active users, and create a new user account.
Choose the new domain for the user’s email address.
Assign a Microsoft 365 license that includes Exchange Online, such as Business Standard, E3, or E5.
After provisioning completes, sign in to Outlook or add the new mailbox as an additional account in Outlook.
Note: Each licensed mailbox is billed separately and functions independently from your existing account.
Option 3: Create a shared mailbox on the new domain
This option is ideal for role based or team addresses such as info@ or sales@ and doesn't require a license up to 50 GB.
Confirm the new domain is verified in the Microsoft 365 admin center.
Go to Teams and groups, then Shared mailboxes, and create a new shared mailbox using the new domain.
Assign members who should have access to the mailbox.
Grant Send as or Send on behalf permissions as needed.
Note: Shared mailboxes don't have their own sign-in. Users access them through their existing accounts.
About shared mailboxes in Microsoft 365 - Microsoft 365 admin | Microsoft Learn
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