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Duplicate Microsoft Account Issue – [Moderator note: Personally Identifiable Information removed]

Marilynn Wit 0 Reputation points
2026-06-01T10:53:40.4+00:00

Dear Microsoft Support Team,

I am writing regarding an issue with my Microsoft account(s) linked to the email address**[Moderator note: Personally Identifiable Information removed]**  .

I am currently being billed monthly for a Microsoft subscription, but I believe I may have accidentally created two separate accounts with the same email address. When I log into my account, I can see an account exists under [Moderator note: Personally Identifiable Information removed]  , but I cannot find any invoices — which makes me think the charges are coming from a different account I no longer have access to. I receive the invoices in my mailbox every month.

I suspect this happened during the initial setup of my account. The original account may have been created under an address such as [Moderator note: Personally Identifiable Information removed]  , and when I later changed the email address, a second account may have been created unintentionally.

My situation in short:

  • I have two Microsoft accounts, both seemingly linked to**[Moderator note: Personally Identifiable Information removed]**  
  • I can only access one of them
  • The account I am being charged for appears to be the one I cannot access
  • I would like to consolidate everything into a single account:[Moderator note: Personally Identifiable Information removed]  

Could you please help me identify both accounts, regain access to the one I'm being billed for, and cancel or merge any duplicate subscription so that I am only paying for one account going forward?

Thank you in advance for your assistance. I look forward to your response.

Kind regards,

Microsoft 365 and Office | Subscription, account, billing | For business | iOS

2 answers

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  1. Rin-L 20,845 Reputation points Microsoft External Staff Moderator
    2026-06-01T12:01:22.7333333+00:00

    Hi @Marilynn Wit

    Thank you for reaching out, and I’m really glad to help you look into this.  

    Just to gently set expectations, this is a community forum (user-to-user support), so moderators like myself don’t have access to Microsoft’s internal systems or the tools needed to directly investigate accounts or billing details. I truly appreciate your understanding that I’m also an end user like you, doing my best to support you within my scope. 

    Based on the details you’ve shared, I’ve tried to reach out to the relevant team to gather some additional information related to your case. I’ve sent you a private message with what I’ve learned so far, along with a few follow-up questions. 

    To access the private message, please click the notification banner as shown in the image below:  

    User's image

    I’m looking forward to your reply there, and I’ll do my best to guide you step by step toward resolving this. 

    Thank you again for your patience and cooperation!  


    Note: Please follow the steps in our documentation to enable e-mail notifications if you want to receive the related email notification for this thread.

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  2. AI answer

    2026-06-01T10:53:58.32+00:00

    The behavior described matches having both a personal Microsoft account and a work/school account that share the same email address, plus a billing issue that must be handled by Microsoft support using secure tools.

    Key points and next steps:

    1. Understand the “two accounts, one email” situation
    • When the same email address is used for both a personal Microsoft account and a work or school account, Microsoft shows a prompt like “Which account do you want to use?” when signing in.
    • The work or school account is created by an organization (for example, under a domain like …onmicrosoft.com), and the personal account is created directly by the user or via services like Xbox or Skype.
    • This explains why there can appear to be two accounts tied to the same visible email address.

    For background on this scenario, see: “Which account do you want to use?” and the section How can I have two accounts with the same email address?

    1. Check which account is actually being billed
    • Sign in to the Microsoft account dashboard for the personal account and review:
      • Services and subscriptions
      • Order history
    • If no matching subscription or invoices appear there, the charges are likely associated with a different account (for example, a work/school account or another personal account that uses the same card).
    • Use the guidance in I’ve been charged twice to:
      • Compare the last few months of bank/credit card statements with the Microsoft order history.
      • Confirm whether there are multiple subscriptions or just closely timed payments.
    1. Investigate if multiple accounts are using the same payment method
    • If only one charge appears in the visible account’s order history but multiple charges appear on the bank statement, Microsoft documentation indicates that another account may be using the same credit card.
    • Go to Payment options for the signed-in Microsoft account and select Investigate to search for other accounts using the same card, as described in the “I’ve been charged twice” article.
    1. Regain access to the billed account If the billed account cannot be accessed:
    • Use the Microsoft account sign-in helper and related tools:
      • Help with the Microsoft account recovery form
      • Help with account sign in verification codes
    • These tools are linked from the Microsoft account sign-in helper and Get help with your Microsoft account pages and are designed to recover access to accounts when the sign-in details are unclear or when there may be multiple accounts.
    1. Cancel or adjust the duplicate subscription Once the billed account is identified:
    • If it is a personal Microsoft account subscription, use the Payment and billing help and related “Cancel subscription” / “Turn off recurring billing” options from the Microsoft account pages to stop future renewals.
    • If it is a work or school account subscription (for example, created under a domain like …onmicrosoft.com), contact the organization’s administrator or billing owner to adjust or cancel that subscription.
    1. When to contact Microsoft Billing Support directly Because this involves:
    • Possible duplicate billing,
    • Multiple accounts tied to the same email,
    • And access issues to the billed account,

    Microsoft Billing Support may need to review the billing profile and transactions in secure tools. Use the Investigate a billing charge and Account & Billing Help entry points to reach support, as referenced in the context. They can:

    • Confirm which account is being billed,
    • Help with account recovery steps if needed,
    • And advise on cancelling or refund eligibility according to Microsoft’s refund policies.

    Note: Microsoft does not merge or “combine” Microsoft accounts into a single account, but subscriptions and billing can be consolidated by cancelling extra subscriptions and using only one active account going forward.


    References:

    AI-generated content may be incorrect. Read our transparency notes for more information.

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