Migrating mailbox data from an Outlook .ost (Offline Storage Table) file to a .pst (Personal Storage Table) file is a common task for IT admins, consultants and power users. OST files are cached copies of mailboxes tied to an Exchange, Outlook.com or Office 365 account; PST files are standalone archives you can import into any Outlook profile. You might need OST → PST migration when you’re moving mailboxes between accounts or machines, recovering mail from an orphaned OST, or preparing data for long-term archiving or third-party migration tools. Microsoft documents the difference and explains the built-in export flow for PSTs.
Below I’ll walk through the core approaches (manual and automated), common pitfalls, and the most widely used third-party tools — what they do, when to use them, and a few practical tips.
Manual options (when you should try these first)
- Use Outlook’s Import/Export (Export to a PST)
If the mailbox is still connected to the profile on the machine (i.e., the OST is not orphaned and Outlook can access the mailbox), the simplest method is Outlook’s File → Open & Export → Import/Export → “Export to a file” → PST. This preserves folder structure and most item properties. It’s the safest first step because it uses Outlook’s own APIs. - Archive / drag-and-drop
For small sets of folders, you can create a new PST in Outlook and drag folders or messages into it. That’s manual and slow for lots of data but useful for selective exports. - Recreate the account + copy
If your goal is migration between accounts on the same machine, add the target account/profile to Outlook and copy mailboxes directly between profiles (requires both accounts accessible in the same Outlook instance).
When manual fails: the OST is corrupted, the original Exchange/Office 365 account is gone, or you don’t have credentials to attach the OST to an Outlook profile. In these cases you need specialized conversion software.
Why use third-party OST→PST tools?
- They can read orphaned / offline / corrupted OST files and extract mailbox items when Outlook won’t open the file.
- They support bulk conversion and filters (date ranges, folders).
- They often convert to multiple target formats (PST, EML, MSG, MBOX, Office 365).
- Many provide a preview to verify data before exporting and recovery options for deleted items or metadata preservation.
Reputable vendors also document compatibility with recent Outlook/Windows versions and provide trial builds to validate results before purchase.
Leading OST→PST tools
Below are the names you’ll keep seeing in IT forums and vendor comparisons. I list core strengths and notable limitations.
1. SysTools OST to PST Converter
Strengths: Mature product with multiple scan modes (normal/advanced), support for large or corrupted OSTs, selective export and filters, and ability to recover deleted items. Good for enterprise usage and orphaned OSTs. Limitations: Licensing per-seat and demo limitations (preview only / limited items saved).
2. Kernel for OST to PST
Strengths: Converts OST to PST and to cloud/other mail platforms (Office 365, Exchange, Gmail), supports bulk files, and provides a save snapshot/resume feature for long jobs. Well suited for IT teams doing migrations to cloud services. Limitations: full functionality is paid; trial versions often limit the number of items per folder that can be exported.
3. Stellar Converter for OST
Strengths: Fast scanning, good recovery of mailbox items and attachments, and a clear preview interface. Often recommended when dealing with severely corrupted OSTs. Limitations: commercial product — evaluate with the trial to confirm your items are recovered intact.
Practical advice and gotchas
- Always work on copies: copy the OST file before using any tool. Don’t run conversions on the original unless you have a backup.
- Check item limits on trials: many vendors let you preview but only export a limited number of items per folder in trial mode (commonly 25 items/folder). Use the trial to confirm recoverability before buying.
- Verify metadata: ensure the tool preserves To/From/Date/attachments and MAPI properties you care about (calendar recurrence, categories, flags).
- Large OSTs: choose a tool that explicitly supports large/unlimited file sizes and multi-threaded processing if you’re converting many gigabytes.
- Corruption handling: advanced scan modes (deep scan, rebuild) help recover data from damaged OSTs — but verify results by previewing items before export.
- Legal/compliance: if you are migrating regulatory archives, consider the chain-of-custody and produce verified exports (hashes, logs) where required.
Recommended workflow (practical step-by-step)
- Make an exact copy of the OST (File Explorer) and work on the copy.
- If Outlook can open the mailbox, try the native Export to PST first (fastest, safest).
- If export isn’t possible, install a reputable converter trial (SysTools/Kernel/Stellar are common choices) and use the preview to confirm items.
- Export to PST (or to Office 365/Exchange if you’re migrating to cloud). Use filters to keep file sizes reasonable.
- Open the resulting PST in Outlook to validate folders, attachments and calendar items.
- Archive or import into the target profile as required.
Final thoughts
OST→PST migration is a solved problem most of the time — native Outlook features handle connected profiles, and mature third-party tools cover orphaned or corrupted OSTs. The right choice depends on scale (single mailbox vs bulk migration), file health (healthy vs corrupted), destination (local PST vs Office 365/cloud), and compliance needs. Try a free trial, validate with a few mailboxes, and pick a vendor that documents compatibility with your Outlook/Windows versions and provides reliable previews and logs. For Microsoft’s official guidance on PST export and an explanation of OST vs PST, see Microsoft Support.









