What is .onmicrosoft.com?
.onmicrosoft.com is the default domain automatically assigned when someone creates a tenant in Microsoft’s cloud ecosystem, including Microsoft 365 and Azure. Every organization gets one, even before adding a custom domain.
Attackers abuse this default behavior to operate from legitimate Microsoft infrastructure, which makes their activity harder to detect.
Core Abuse Techniques
1. Creating Malicious Tenants
Attackers register new Microsoft tenants (often using free trials). Each tenant automatically receives an address like:
fakecompany.onmicrosoft.com
Because these domains are owned and operated by Microsoft, messages sent from them often appear more trustworthy to email systems and users.
2. Trust Bypass in Email Security
Emails sent from .onmicrosoft.com domains:
- Are properly authenticated
- Originate from Microsoft servers
- Often pass SPF, DKIM, and DMARC checks
This allows malicious emails to bypass spam and phishing filters that would normally block look-alike or newly registered domains.
3. TOAD (Telephone-Oriented Attack Delivery)
Instead of including malware links or attachments, attackers:
- Send legitimate-looking Microsoft invitations or notifications
- Embed messages urging the victim to call a phone number
- Use the phone call to conduct social engineering, credential theft, or remote-access scams
Because no malicious link is present, many defenses fail to trigger.
4. Microsoft Teams Phishing
Using Microsoft Teams, attackers:
- Initiate chats or calls as external users
- Impersonate IT support or administrators
- Ask victims to approve access, reset passwords, or install tools
Default collaboration settings in many organizations allow this behavior.
5. Brand Impersonation
Attackers customize tenant display names and invitation text to look like:
- Microsoft Security
- Helpdesk
- Cloud Admin Team
Even though the underlying domain is .onmicrosoft.com, users often trust the branding and wording without checking the sender details.
Why This Works So Well
- Legitimate infrastructure: The domain and mail servers are real Microsoft assets.
- Low cost: Tenant creation is easy and inexpensive.
- Built-in delivery: Microsoft systems send the emails on the attacker’s behalf.
- Human trust: Users are conditioned to trust Microsoft-branded communications.
Common Attack Outcomes
- Stolen Microsoft credentials
- MFA fatigue or approval attacks
- Remote access installation
- Financial fraud or invoice redirection
- Lateral movement inside cloud environments
Defensive Strategies (High-Level)
- Treat all
.onmicrosoft.comsenders as external and untrusted - Restrict external Microsoft Teams chats and calls
- Alert on first-time
.onmicrosoft.comsenders - Train users to distrust unsolicited “Microsoft” messages
- Monitor cloud audit logs for new guest invitations and collaboration activity
Key Takeaway
.onmicrosoft.com abuse is dangerous because it uses trusted cloud infrastructure as the attack platform. The emails, chats, and invitations are technically legitimate—only the intent is malicious.
This makes these attacks harder to block with traditional tools and more reliant on behavioral detection and user awareness.
