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To Add Color Coding to Calendar items

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› Outlook › Calendar › To Add Color Coding to Calendar items

Last reviewed on September 16, 2019     24 Comments

Many people want to be able to color-code their Outlook calendars to distinguish between business and personal appointments, for example. Having been on the wish list for years, this feature finally arrives in Outlook 2002 in the form of Labels and Outlook 2007 adds colors to categories.

See Understanding Outlook's Calendar patchwork colors for display issues when using color categories in Outlook 2007 and Outlook 2010.

Outlook 2002/2003 | Earlier Versions | Notes | Other Tools | More Information

Outlook 2007/2010

Outlook 2007 and 2010 use Color Categories to color appointments, not labels. If you upgraded from Outlook 2002/2003 and used labels, the appointments are color coded with the color if there is not a category assigned.
Labels

The label field is not removed from the items. If you open the mailbox in Outlook 2003, you'll see the label and label color.

When you use categories and custom views with automatic (conditional) formatting, the color assigned to the category is used, not the conditional formatting color.

See Outlook's Patchwork Calendar for display issues when using color categories.

Outlook 2002/2003

Color labels in older OutlookIn response to user requests, Microsoft has added on-the-fly color-coding to the Outlook 2002 calendar folder. In any day/week/month view, you can apply one of 10 available colors by right-clicking the appointment and choosing Label from the pop-up menu, as shown to the right.

In table views, Outlook 2002 supports the same automatic formatting feature as in Outlook 98 and 2000.

The Edit Labels command lets you change the text associated with each color. (You cannot change the available colors.) For example, I've changed "Must Attend" to "Deadline" on the list pictured here.

More tips for using the color labels:

  • If you use the Edit Labels feature to change the text for a label, be sure to keep a list of the original label text and the new text. You'll need the original text if you want to filter or group by the Label field.
  • Outlook 2002 extends the automatic formatting feature to the Day/Week/Month view using the color labels. Right-click anywhere in a day/week/month view calendar, and choose Automatic Formatting. For example, you can use automatic formatting to create a rule that looks for every appointment where the subject contains "birthday" and set those appointments to use the purple Birthday color.
  • To apply labels in bulk to existing appointment items without using automatic formatting, create a new table view and set it to group by the Label property. You can then drag items from the Label:None group to the group whose label you want to apply to those items. Remember that table views use the built-in label names and ignore the names you may have customized, so keep that list of your customizations handy.

Earlier Versions

Microsoft Outlook 98 and Outlook 2000 support color-coding, but only in Table views. (Choose View | Current View | Customize Current View | Automatic Formatting.)

While you can't add color coding to Outlook's Day/Week/Month view of the Calendar folder, you can create a calendar in Word that color codes your Outlook appointments and events. Get the My Outlook Calendar template.

Notes

For Outlook 2002 (and later) developers, the Label property is not exposed in the Outlook model, but you can access it via CDO. Values can be 0 to 9. Code samples:

  • Set color label on appointment
  • Now-retired Outlook MVP Randy Byrne posted some sample code to return the color code index from the currently selected item in the Calendar folder.

The user's customizations of the label text are stored in the 0x36DC0102 property tag on the calendar folder itself. This is a binary property whose structure is not documented. Each calendar folder can have its own list of labels.

If you group by the Label property, Outlook displays the original label names, not your customized names.

There is a known incompatibility with Outlook 2000, but also a post-SP3 hotfix to resolve it. See OL2000 Cannot Locate the Recurrence Information... Error Message When You Open a Recurring Meeting, Appointment, or Event.

 

Tools in the Spotlight

Category Manager

Category Manager allows sharing of color categories; it adds a sidebar to the folder view as well as opened items, in which you can group your categories and assign them lightning fast; and it adds a reminder, which optionally prompts you if you forget to assign a category. Version 3

Tools

More Information

  • Microsoft Outlook Calendar Issues
  • New Features in Microsoft Outlook 2002
  • OL2002 Daily Appointments Not in Color on Some HP Printers
To Add Color Coding to Calendar items was last modified: September 16th, 2019 by Diane Poremsky

Related Posts:

  • Outlook features we loved (or hated) that lasted just two versions
  • Make 'Today' stand out more in the calendar
  • Use Upgrade to Color Categories to add Categories to the Master List
  • Creating New Color Categories

About Diane Poremsky

A Microsoft Outlook Most Valuable Professional (MVP) since 1999, Diane is the author of several books, including Outlook 2013 Absolute Beginners Book. She also created video training CDs and online training classes for Microsoft Outlook. You can find her helping people online in Outlook Forums as well as in the Microsoft Answers and TechNet forums.

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Sharon
December 16, 2014 7:29 pm

Actually, worked it out,using instructions I had for 2007. I was looking for Free as an option under All Appointment Fieds rather than looking for Show time as and then Free as the option. So all good now, thanks.

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Sharon
December 16, 2014 7:07 pm

Is there a way to change the default colours in Outlook 2013 so that Free/Busy/Out of Office are different eg yellow/blue/purple rather than the default which are hard to distinguish?

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Dan
June 23, 2014 4:40 pm

Thanks! Works perfectly!! I'm going to see if I can modify it to give me a different color for declined meetings at the same time. I would assume I could use an
If... ElseIf... construct and be off to the races. Really not necessary as a no reply or a declined reply requires the same action on my part (contact someone and sort it out)

Thanks again

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Diane Poremsky
Reply to  Dan
June 23, 2014 9:34 pm

Yes, you can use an If... ElseIf to check for declined.

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Dan
June 19, 2014 12:49 pm

Most of my meetings are set up so that I invite an individual to a meeting. Simultaneously, I set up an identical meeting to another individual. Both are outside of my organization. I would like to change the color of the meeting once they accept the invitation. Looking at my calendar if I see two "green" meetings side by side, I would know that both parties have accepted. If one is still the default color I'd know I need to follow up to ensure they're going to attend. (I'm an "outside" recruiter and don't get paid if our client and consultant connect w/o my participation) Do you know of a way to do this?

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Diane Poremsky
Reply to  Dan
June 21, 2014 7:15 pm

Outlook doesn't have the capability, but you might be able to do it using a macro. I'll see if i can put something together.

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Diane Poremsky
Reply to  Dan
June 21, 2014 8:26 pm

Try this macro: https://www.slipstick.com/outlook/rules/add-category-accepted-meetings/

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Delta
April 2, 2014 9:15 am

I am using Outlook 2010 and I would like to color code the days according to a 2-2-3 schedule so that I know what dates certain shifts are working. Is this possible? It would make my life so much easier if it is.

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Diane Poremsky
Reply to  Delta
April 2, 2014 1:18 pm

Yes and No. Outlook doesn't have any specific way to color code, other than by setting the Work week and work hours in File, Options, Calendar. This will shade the non-working days (and hours) and the Work Week button in the calendar will hide the non-working days. However, this only works if the days and shifts are always the same. If they aren't you'd need to change the setting constantly. (PITA)

For rotating shifts, you can assign a color category to the shifts. You can use color coded all day events to mark the working days and appointments to mark the hours.

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sharon
January 29, 2014 9:37 am

How do I do that?

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Diane Poremsky
Reply to  sharon
February 9, 2014 9:18 am

You can create the list the old fashioned way, by editing the master list. This is easiest if there are just a few shared categories. Or use an addin or macro to copy the same list to one or more computers. Outlook Categories and Color Categories tools and a macro to create the list and one to restore the list is Create a list of color categories and merge or restore the list using VBA

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sharon
January 28, 2014 2:34 pm

Is it possible to color calendar a network appointment? For example, I keep the calendar for my office, and my boss wants all his appointments in a certain color, so as I make the appointment I color code it, but when he accepts the invite, it doesn't show up in color on his computer. Can I fix this?

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Diane Poremsky
Reply to  sharon
January 29, 2014 12:54 am

You need to add the category to his outlook - the category list is per user, not shared.

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Geraldine Ysselstein
June 28, 2013 11:40 am

Is it possible to colour code events in your calendar and then pull those same colours out into another calendar?

For example, if you have one master calendar that lists everything that you are doing in a week-work (coloured in blue) and home (coloured in green). Is it then possible to "pull" a work calendar from your master calendar based on the colour? And is it possible to "pull" a home calendar from your master calendar based on its colour?

I would like to be able to see everything in one calendar, but if I share my calendar, I would like to be able to able to give someone just my work calendar or just my home calendar.

Thank you!

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Diane Poremsky
Reply to  Geraldine Ysselstein
June 29, 2013 9:11 pm

No, not without using VBA. You can hide private appointments but can't share by category. It would be better to use 2 calendars and overlay them, that way you can share either calendar.

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