Shared Folders
Shared Folders
This is where you let other people in your organization see one of your mailbox folders in their own mail app — and where you see folders that other people have shared with you.
The short version
A typical use is a team inbox. Say you have a folder called Sales under your Inbox where all the sales inquiries land. You can share it with two colleagues so that all three of you can read, file, and reply to those messages from your own mail app, without anyone having to forward anything or log in as somebody else.
This page lets you do four things:
- See which of your folders you've already shared, and with whom.
- Share another folder with another person in your organization.
- Stop sharing a folder.
- See which folders other people have shared with you.
This page only exists for mailbox users, and only when your administrator has turned folder sharing on at the server. If sharing is off, the page tells you so and there's nothing else to do here.
What the page shows
The page is split into two cards.
- A short reminder of how shared folders work and where they appear in the recipient's mail app (under a
Shared/namespace). - A note about Nextcloud Mail caching (covered below).
- A Share a Folder form with three fields: Folder Path, Share With, and Permissions.
- A table of your existing shares with one row per share:
| Column | What it shows |
|---|---|
| Folder | The path of the folder you shared (for example, INBOX/Sales). |
| Shared With | The email address of the person you shared it with. |
| Permissions | Coloured badges — Read (green), Write (yellow), Delete (red) — showing what they can do. |
| Actions | A red Revoke button that stops the share. |
| Column | What it shows |
|---|---|
| Owner | The email address of the person who shared it. |
| Folder | The path of their folder. |
| Permissions | The same Read / Write / Delete badges, showing what they let you do. |
Note there is no Revoke button on this card. Only the person who owns the folder can stop a share. If a folder has been shared with you and you don't want to see it any more, ask the owner to revoke it, or unsubscribe from it in your mail app.
Sharing a folder
- In the Folder Path field, pick a folder. The dropdown autocompletes from the list of folders that already exist in your mailbox — start typing and it will narrow the list. If the folder you want isn't there yet, you can also type a custom path (for example,
INBOX/Projects/Acme) and it will accept it. - In the Share With field, pick the person to share with. The list is restricted to other mailbox users in your domain. If the dropdown is empty, you're the only mailbox user in your domain and there's no one to share with.
- In Permissions, check the boxes for what the recipient should be able to do:
- Read — they can see messages in the folder and read them. This is checked by default and is the minimum useful permission.
- Write — they can move messages into the folder and mark messages as read.
- Delete — they can delete messages from the folder. If you also gave Write, they can move messages out, which is effectively a delete from the folder's point of view.
- Click the blue Share Folder button. The page reloads and the new share appears in the My Shared Folders table below.
Pick the lowest permission level that does the job. If the recipient only needs to see what's in the folder, leave it at Read. If they're meant to help you process the folder, give Write and Delete too.
Stopping a share
- Find the row in the My Shared Folders table for the folder and person you want to stop sharing with.
- Click the red Revoke button on the right.
- A confirmation box appears asking "Are you sure you want to revoke this folder share?" — click OK to confirm or Cancel to back out.
If you change your mind, you can share it again right away. Permissions and any earlier sharing arrangement are not remembered, so set the checkboxes again from scratch.
When someone shares a folder with you
Nextcloud Mail (the built-in webmail). Nextcloud Mail caches its folder list once when the account is first set up, and it does not automatically pick up folders that are shared with you later. If a folder appears in your Shared With Me list but you don't see it in Nextcloud Mail, do this:
- Open the webmail.
- Go to Settings → Mail accounts.
- Find your account and remove it.
- Add it back using the same credentials.
That fresh setup re-reads your full folder tree from the server, and the shared folder will show up under a Shared/ heading along with the rest. You only have to do this when a new share is added; existing shares survive.
Thunderbird. Thunderbird sees shared folders the moment it refreshes its folder list. To refresh:
- Right-click your account in the folder list on the left.
- Choose Subscribe.
- Click Refresh, tick the box next to the shared folder, and click OK.
Outlook (desktop). Right-click your account, choose IMAP Folders, click Query, then highlight the new shared folder and click Subscribe. The folder appears in your account's folder tree.
Apple Mail (iOS or macOS). Pull-to-refresh in the Mailboxes screen, or go to the account's mailbox list and tap Edit to confirm the new folder is ticked.
If the folder still doesn't show up after the refresh step for your app, double-check the Shared With Me card on this page — if the share isn't there, it was never created (or was already revoked). If the share is there but your mail app isn't showing it, repeat the refresh step; for Nextcloud Mail specifically, do the remove-and-re-add.
What this page does NOT do
A few things this page is not for:
Common scenarios
Sharing a team inbox with a colleague.
You have an INBOX/Sales folder you use for incoming sales inquiries. Pick INBOX/Sales in the Folder Path dropdown, pick your colleague in the Share With dropdown, tick Read, Write, and Delete, and click Share Folder. Tell them to refresh their mail app (or, for Nextcloud Mail, remove and re-add their account) and they'll see the folder under Shared/ and can file, reply, and clean up alongside you.
Sharing a project folder with multiple people. Share the folder once with each person. Each person gets their own row in the My Shared Folders table, and each row can have different permissions if you want — for example, the project lead might get Read + Write + Delete, while a junior team member only gets Read.
Cleaning up old shares. Skim the My Shared Folders table every now and then. Anyone who no longer needs access to a folder you shared a while back should be revoked, both to keep the list manageable and as a basic hygiene measure.
Frequently asked questions
What happens to the shared folder if I delete it? Deleting your own folder also removes everyone's access to it, because there's nothing left to share. Empty the folder first (or move its contents elsewhere) if you want to keep the messages.
Does the recipient see folders inside the shared folder? No. Sharing is per folder, not recursive. If you want them to see a subfolder too, share that subfolder separately.
Does sharing my Sent folder share my drafts too? No. Sent and Drafts are separate folders. Sharing one does not affect the other.
Can the recipient share the folder onward with someone else? No. Only the folder's owner can share it. If a third person also needs access, you have to share with them yourself.
The recipient said they can't see the folder in Nextcloud Mail. Why?
Nextcloud Mail caches its folder list when the account is first set up and does not refresh it when new folders are shared later. They have to go to Webmail → Settings → Mail accounts, remove their account, and add it back. After the fresh setup the shared folder appears under Shared/. This is a known limitation of Nextcloud Mail, not something you've done wrong.
If I give someone Write but not Delete, can they still move messages? They can move messages into the folder, and they can mark messages as read. Moving a message out of the folder is effectively a delete from the folder's point of view, so that takes the Delete permission.
Does the recipient see when new mail arrives in a shared folder? Yes, as soon as their mail app next refreshes that folder. Most apps poll every few minutes, so it's effectively live.
Where to next
- Mail Filters — sort incoming mail into folders automatically so the folder you eventually share is already populated and organized.
- My App Passwords — if a recipient is having trouble connecting their mail app at all, they'll need an app password first before any folder you share with them is reachable.
- Set Up Your Devices — step-by-step mobile setup wizards. Useful to send to a recipient who hasn't set up their mail app yet and needs to before they can see anything you share.