Search experiences in SharePoint
Microsoft Search is the modern search experience in SharePoint in Microsoft 365 and is a personalized experience. It uses the insights of the Microsoft Graph to show results that are relevant to you. Routine tasks such as finding the right version of a document, getting back to a presentation you were editing, or a document you were collaborating with others on, are easy. Learn more about Microsoft Search for users. The classic search experience, on the other hand, can be tailored more to your organization. Learn about the differences between the search experiences.
Both search experiences are turned on by default and as a search administrator you can't turn either search experience off. Which search experience your users see depends on where they search from:
Users get the classic search experience on publishing sites, classic team sites, and in the Search Center.
Users get the Microsoft Search experience on the SharePoint start page, hub sites, communication sites, and modern team sites. Learn about classic and modern sites.
If you're in a document library, the search box shows Search this library. If you're in the home page of the site, the box shows Search this site. In all other locations, the search box shows Search.
Easy to search - Microsoft Search suggests results based on users' previous activity in Microsoft 365, right in the search box. On the search results page the results are ordered by relevance.
Find shared files - Microsoft Search uses advanced query understanding to make finding shared files simple. Users can easily find files they're collaborating on.
Show relevant content - Promote the information and answers your users need to complete tasks, for example policies, benefits, resources, tools, and more. You can also target specific groups, like new hires or remote workers.
Administer across all apps - Microsoft Search is on by default and any administration you do applies to Microsoft Search in all the apps.
Easy to explore results - Users can explore results without leaving search. They can for example browse through a presentation directly in the search results page and quickly assess if it's the right result.
Mobile friendly - The Microsoft Search results page is mobile friendly.
User friendly interface - Microsoft Search offers a great user interface without a search administrator configuring anything. Learn more
Microsoft Search evolves - The set of content types users can search for and the intelligence of the search box will grow over time. Learn what's coming next in Microsoft Search
Which experience your users see depends on whether your organization mostly uses classic or modern sites. If you believe that Microsoft Search gives your users the best experience, learn how to get started with Microsoft Search in SharePoint.
If you need custom refiners or search verticals for organization-specific content, or you need to display results for organization-specific content differently than other content. Use the Search Center (classic search) as your portal. If not, we recommend promoting the SharePoint start page (Microsoft Search) to your users.
Yes, if you have customized search. A classic site has a classic search box. For example, you've set up the search box to redirect to a custom Search Center in order show results that are filtered and formatted for organization-specific content types. The modern site has the Microsoft Search box. You can't customize the Microsoft Search experience like that. If you don't need to customize search, we recommend using modern sites.
It's possible, but it takes some effort to do this with classic search. It's better to use a hub site to organize the sites. Hub sites use Microsoft Search, which is scoped to search for news, people, files, and sites across all sites that are associated with the hub. Learn more about hub sites
Yes. With cloud hybrid search, both on-premises and online content go into the same index, which both the classic and Microsoft Search experiences use.