The native Outlook way
Outlook can send PDFs as attachments or links in one-to-one and campaign emails.
If you only need to send a one-off file to one person, native sharing can be enough. If the PDF needs to be reused, opened on mobile, shared again, or measured, a hosted PDF link is usually cleaner.
Where native PDF sharing falls short
Attachments can hurt deliverability, create version confusion, and provide little insight after the email is sent.
How to share a PDF on Outlook with PDFHost
Upload the PDF to PDFHost and give it a clear title.
Copy the hosted PDF link, QR code, download URL, or embed code.
Paste the link into the email body, signature, follow-up, campaign, or autoresponder in Outlook.
Use analytics to review views, downloads, referrers, devices, browsers, and read-time trends.
Share the PDF as a link, not a heavy attachment.
Host it once, use the link anywhere, and see whether readers open it.
Good PDFs to share on Outlook
Practical tips
- Use a button or short text link instead of attaching a large file.
- Send a test email on mobile.
- Use analytics to time follow-ups.
Where to paste it
- Email body, signature, follow-up, campaign, or autoresponder
- Email follow-ups, social bios, websites, QR codes, or client portals
- Anywhere readers need the latest PDF without asking for access
FAQ: sharing PDFs on Outlook
Can I share a PDF on Outlook without sending an attachment?
Yes. Upload the PDF to PDFHost, copy the hosted link, and paste it into Outlook wherever links are supported.
Is a PDFHost link better than uploading the PDF directly?
For repeated sharing, a hosted link is easier to update, works better across devices, and gives analytics that a normal attachment usually cannot provide.
Can I track views from Outlook?
PDFHost can show views, downloads, referrers, devices, browsers, and read-time trends on analytics-enabled plans.
What PDFs work well for this?
Good examples include proposal PDF, invoice PDF, lead magnet, report PDF.