Sunday, 1 March 2026

 

 

Recent Microsoft Excel AutoSave Update and User Guidance

Microsoft Excel users, especially those on Office 365 subscriptions, have recently experienced changes and intermittent issues with the AutoSave feature. While Microsoft is aware of these problems and actively working on a fix, users should once again adopt the habit of frequently saving their work manually to avoid data loss.

What’s Happening?

The AutoSave feature, designed to save your work continuously in the background, has shown some inconsistencies in recent updates. Some users report delays or failures in AutoSave triggering as expected, which can lead to concerns about unsaved changes.

Why This Matters for Office 365 Users

Unlike perpetual license users, Office 365 subscribers rely heavily on AutoSave for seamless cloud integration and real-time collaboration. The current issues mean that despite AutoSave being enabled, it may not always function reliably.

Recommendations While the Issue Persists

  • Frequent Manual Saves: Users should consciously save their work regularly using Ctrl+S or the Save button.
  • Check AutoSave Status: Always verify that the AutoSave toggle is on and that your file is saved to OneDrive or SharePoint.
  • Keep Software Updated: Ensure you have the latest Office updates installed, as Microsoft is rolling out fixes.
  • Backup Important Files: Consider keeping local backups of critical documents during this period.

Microsoft’s Response

Microsoft has acknowledged the AutoSave issues affecting some users and is actively working on a resolution. Updates and patches are expected in upcoming Office releases.

Recent Restoration of AutoSave

Some users have reported that the AutoSave feature appears to have been restored and is functioning properly again, especially when saving to OneDrive. This is a positive sign that Microsoft’s ongoing efforts to fix the issue are making progress.

However, it is still advisable to remain cautious and continue saving frequently until the fix is officially confirmed and broadly deployed.

Microsoft continues to monitor the situation and encourages users to report any persistent issues to help improve the service.

 

Excel, Word, and Modern UserForms — Announcing My New Platform


Over the years I’ve shared Excel tips, automation tools, and problem‑solving posts across my old site www.excel-it.com and on forums like OzGrid, ExcelForum, MrExcel and others as royUK. It’s been a long time since those early days, but the work has never really stopped — it’s just been happening quietly in the background. I have been taking a break from forums, but I feel that my time has been well spent and I have taken my work to a higher level, producing many innovative tools including truly modernised userforms – even a round splashscreen!

Alongside my Excel work, I’ve also been moving into Word development, currently building an improved mail merge system with a cleaner workflow and a more modern interface. It’s been exciting to take the same design principles I’ve used in Excel and apply them to Word automation.

I’ve now launched a new website www.excelchemy.com to bring everything together in one place. This will be the home for my current projects, new tools, and the kind of practical fixes and walkthroughs I’ve always enjoyed sharing.

From here on, I’ll be posting short updates, announcements, and quick explanations — with links back to Excelchemy where the tools live and evolve. Think of this as the central hub for what I’m working on now and what’s coming next.

If you followed my work in the past, welcome back. If you’re new, I hope you find something here that makes your day-to-day work a little easier. More updates coming very soon.