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Have you noticed that a yearly recurring event in Outlook suddenly appears one month later than expected? You’re not alone. Many Outlook users report that annual events such as birthdays, anniversaries, reminders, and recurring appointments shift by several weeks or even an entire month after some time.
This can be confusing, especially when the event was originally created correctly and worked fine for years.
Here’s why it happens and how to fix it.
Users experiencing this Outlook calendar issue often notice:
For example:
Several factors can cause recurring events to move unexpectedly.
The most common cause is a corrupted recurrence rule.
When an event has been synchronized repeatedly across:
the recurrence pattern can occasionally become damaged.
When this happens, Outlook may calculate future occurrences incorrectly.
Outlook relies heavily on time zone settings.
If:
recurring events can sometimes shift unexpectedly.
While time zone issues usually affect hours or days, they can occasionally impact yearly recurring events as well.
Many users connect Outlook calendars to:
If synchronization fails or conflicts occur, recurrence data may become inconsistent across devices.
Events imported from:
may contain recurrence rules that Outlook interprets differently.
The problem may not appear immediately but can surface months or years later.
The most effective solution is usually:
This rebuilds the recurrence pattern and often eliminates the problem permanently.
Before deleting the event:
Then recreate the appointment from scratch rather than editing the existing recurrence.
Many users find this resolves incorrect yearly scheduling.
Verify that Outlook is using the correct time zone.
Confirm that:
Calendar-related bugs are occasionally fixed through updates.
Make sure you’re running the latest version of:
Installing updates may resolve recurrence calculation issues.
If the event appears incorrectly in Outlook Desktop:
Sometimes the web version displays information more accurately and can help identify synchronization issues.
If multiple recurring events are affected:
If the new event works correctly, the original calendar data may be damaged.
Birthdays are a special type of recurring event.
They can become inaccurate due to:
Removing and re-adding the contact often fixes birthday-related recurrence problems.
Yes.
Users who sync calendars between:
may occasionally encounter recurrence conflicts.
The more systems involved, the greater the chance of synchronization inconsistencies.
If annual recurring events in Outlook are appearing one month late, the problem is usually caused by a corrupted recurrence pattern, synchronization issue, imported calendar data, or time zone conflict.
The most effective fix is often: