Transport rule conditions and exceptions (predicates) in Exchange 2013

Applies to: Exchange Server 2013

Conditions and exceptions in transport rules identify the messages that the rule is applied to or not applied to. For example, if the rule adds a disclaimer to messages, you can configure the rule to only apply to messages that contain specific words, messages sent by specific users, or to all messages except those sent by the members of a specific group. Collectively, the conditions and exceptions in transport rules are also known as predicates, because for every condition, there's a corresponding exception that uses the exact same settings and syntax. The only difference is conditions specify messages to include, while exceptions specify messages to exclude.

Most conditions and exceptions have one property that requires one or more values. For example, the The sender is condition requires the sender of the message. Some conditions have two properties. For example, the A message header includes any of these words condition requires one property to specify the message header field, and a second property to specify the text to look for in the header field. Some conditions or exceptions don't have any properties. For example, the Any attachment has executable content condition simply looks for attachments in messages that have executable content.

For more information about transport rules in Exchange Server 2013, see Transport rules in Exchange 2013.

For more information about conditions and exceptions in transport rules in Exchange Online Protection or Exchange Online, see Mail flow rule conditions and exceptions (predicates) in Exchange Online.

Conditions and exceptions for transport rules on Mailbox servers

The tables in the following sections describe the conditions and exceptions that are available in transport rules on Mailbox servers. The properties types are described in the Property types section.

Senders

Recipients

Message subject or body

Attachments

Any recipients

Message sensitive information types, To and Cc values, size, and character sets

Sender and recipient

Message properties

Message headers

Notes:

  • After you select a condition or exception in the Exchange admin center (EAC), the value that's ultimately shown in the Apply this rule if or Except if field is often different (shorter) than the click path value you selected. Also, when you create new rules based on a template (a filtered list of scenarios), you can often select a short condition name instead of following the complete click path. The short names and full click path values are shown in the EAC column in the tables.

  • If you select [Apply to all messages] in the EAC, you can't specify any other conditions. The equivalent in the Exchange Management Shell is to create a rule without specifying any condition parameters.

  • The settings and properties are the same in conditions and exceptions, so the output of the Get-TransportRulePredicate cmdlet doesn't list exceptions separately. Also, the names of some of the predicates that are returned by this cmdlet are different than the corresponding parameter names, and a predicate might require multiple parameters.

Senders

For conditions and exceptions that examine the sender's address, you can specify where rule looks for the sender's address.

In the EAC, in the Properties of this rule section, click Match sender address in message. Note that you might need to click More options to see this setting. In the Exchange Management Shell, the parameter is SenderAddressLocation. The available values are:

  • Header: Only examine senders in the message headers (for example, the From, Sender, or Reply-To fields). This is the default value, and is the way transport rules worked before Exchange 2013 Cumulative Update 1 (CU1).

  • Envelope: Only examine senders from the message envelope (the MAIL FROM value that was used in the SMTP transmission, which is typically stored in the Return-Path field). Note that message envelope searching is only available for the following conditions (and the corresponding exceptions):

  • The sender is (From)

    • The sender is a member of (FromMemberOf)
    • The sender address includes (FromAddressContainsWords)
    • The sender address matches (FromAddressMatchesPatterns)
    • The sender's domain is (SenderDomainIs)
  • Header or envelope (HeaderOrEnvelope) Examine senders in the message header and the message envelope.

Condition or exception in the EAC Condition and exception parameters in the Exchange Management Shell Property type Description Available in
The sender is

The sender > is this person
From

ExceptIfFrom
Addresses Messages that are sent by the specified mailboxes, mail users, or mail contacts in the Exchange organization. Exchange 2007 or later
The sender is located

The sender > is external/internal
FromScope

ExceptIfFromScope
UserScopeFrom Messages that are sent by either internal senders or external senders. Exchange 2007 or later
The sender is a member of

The sender > is a member of this group
FromMemberOf

ExceptIfFromMemberOf
Addresses Messages that are sent by a member of the specified group. Exchange 2007 or later
The sender address includes

The sender > address includes any of these words
FromAddressContainsWords

ExceptIfFromAddressContainsWords
Words Messages that contain the specified words in the sender's email address. Exchange 2007 or later
The sender address matches

The sender > address matches any of these text patterns
FromAddressMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfFromAddressMatchesPatterns
Patterns Messages where the sender's email address contains text patterns that match the specified regular expressions. Exchange 2007 or later
The sender's specified properties include any of these words

The sender > has specific properties including any of these words
SenderADAttributeContainsWords

ExceptIfSenderADAttributeContainsWords
First property: ADAttribute

Second property: Words
Messages where the specified Active Directory attribute of the sender contains any of the specified words.

Note that the Country attribute requires the two-letter country code value (for example, DE for Germany).
Exchange 2010 or later
The sender's specified properties match these text patterns

The sender > has specific properties matching these text patterns
SenderADAttributeMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfSenderADAttributeMatchesPatterns
First property: ADAttribute

Second property: Patterns
Messages where the specified Active Directory attribute of the sender contains text patterns that match the specified regular expressions. Exchange 2010 or later
The sender has overridden the Policy Tip

The sender > has overridden the Policy Tip
HasSenderOverride

ExceptIfHasSenderOverride
n/a Messages where the sender has chosen to override a data loss prevention (DLP) policy. For more information about DLP policies, see Data loss prevention. Exchange 2013 or later
Sender's IP address is in the range

The sender > IP address is in any of these ranges or exactly matches
SenderIPRanges

ExceptIfSenderIPRanges
IPAddressRanges Messages where the sender's IP address matches the specified IP address, or falls within the specified IP address range. Exchange 2013 or later
The sender's domain is

The sender > domain is
SenderDomainIs

ExceptIfSenderDomainIs
DomainName Messages where the domain of the sender's email address matches the specified value.

If you need to find sender domains that contain the specified domain (for example, any subdomain of a domain), use The sender address matches (FromAddressMatchesPatterns) condition and specify the domain by using the syntax: '\.domain\.com$'.
Exchange 2013 or later

Recipients

Condition or exception in the EAC Condition and exception parameters in the Exchange Management Shell Property type Description Available in
The recipient is

The recipient > is this person
SentTo

ExceptIfSentTo
Addresses Messages where one of the recipients is the specified mailbox, mail user, or mail contact in the Exchange organization. The recipients can be in the To, Cc, or Bcc fields of the message.

Note: You can't specify distribution groups or mail-enabled security groups. If you need to take action on messages that are sent to a group, use the To box contains (AnyOfToHeader) condition instead.

Exchange 2007 or later
The recipient is located

The recipient > is external/external
SentToScope

ExceptIfSentToScope
UserScopeTo Messages that are sent to internal recipients, external recipients, external recipients in partner organizations, or external recipients in non-partner organizations. Exchange 2007 or later
The recipient is a member of

The recipient > is a member of this group
SentToMemberOf

ExceptIfSentToMemberOf
Addresses Messages that contain recipients who are members of the specified group. The group can be in the To, Cc, or Bcc fields of the message. Exchange 2007 or later
The recipient address includes

The recipient > address includes any of these words
RecipientAddressContainsWords

ExceptIfRecipientAddressContainsWords
Words Messages that contain the specified words in the recipient's email address.

Note: This condition doesn't consider messages that are sent to recipient proxy addresses. It only matches messages that are sent to the recipient's primary email address.

Exchange 2010 or later
The recipient address matches

The recipient > address matches any of these text patterns
RecipientAddressMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfRecipientAddressMatchesPatterns
Patterns Messages where a recipient's email address contains text patterns that match the specified regular expressions.

Note: This condition doesn't consider messages that are sent to recipient proxy addresses. It only matches messages that are sent to the recipient's primary email address.

Exchange 2010 or later
The recipient's specified properties include any of these words

The recipient > has specific properties including any of these words
RecipientADAttributeContainsWords

ExceptIfRecipientADAttributeContainsWords
First property: ADAttribute

Second property: Words
Messages where the specified Active Directory attribute of a recipient contains any of the specified words.

Note that the Country attribute requires the two-letter country code value (for example, DE for Germany).
Exchange 2010 or later
The recipient's specified properties match these text patterns

The recipient > has specific properties matching these text patterns
RecipientADAttributeMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfRecipientADAttributeMatchesPatterns
First property: ADAttribute

Second property: Patterns
Messages where the specified Active Directory attribute of a recipient contains text patterns that match the specified regular expressions. Exchange 2010 or later
A recipient's domain is

The recipient > domain is
RecipientDomainIs

ExceptIfRecipientDomainIs
DomainName Messages where the domain of a recipient's email address matches the specified value.

If you need to find recipient domains that contain the specified domain (for example, any subdomain of a domain), use The recipient address matches (RecipientAddressMatchesPatterns) condition, and specify the domain by using the syntax '\.domain\.com$'.
Exchange 2013 or later

Message subject or body

Note

The search for words or text patterns in the subject or other header fields in the message occurs after the message has been decoded from the MIME content transfer encoding method that was used to transmit the binary message between SMTP servers in ASCII text. You can't use conditions or exceptions to search for the raw (typically, Base64) encoded values of the subject or other header fields in messages.

Condition or exception in the EAC Condition and exception parameters in the Exchange Management Shell Property type Description Available in
The subject or body includes

The subject or body > subject or body includes any of these words
SubjectOrBodyContainsWords

ExceptIfSubjectOrBodyContainsWords
Words Messages that have the specified words in the Subject field or message body. Exchange 2007 or later
The subject or body matches

The subject or body > subject or body matches these text patterns
SubjectOrBodyMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfSubjectOrBodyMatchesPatterns
Patterns Messages where the Subject field or message body contain text patterns that match the specified regular expressions. Exchange 2007 or later
The subject includes

The subject or body > subject includes any of these words
SubjectContainsWords

ExceptIfSubjectContainsWords
Words Messages that have the specified words in the Subject field. Exchange 2007 or later
The subject matches

The subject or body > subject matches these text patterns
SubjectMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfSubjectMatchesPatterns
Patterns Messages where the Subject field contains text patterns that match the specified regular expressions. Exchange 2007 or later

Attachments

For more information about how transport rules inspect message attachments, see Use transport rules to inspect message attachments in Exchange 2013.

Condition or exception in the EAC Condition and exception parameters in the Exchange Management Shell Property type Description Available in
Any attachment's content includes

Any attachment > content includes any of these words
AttachmentContainsWords

ExceptIfAttachmentContainsWords
Words Messages where an attachment contains the specified words. Exchange 2010 or later
Any attachments content matches

Any attachment > content matches these text patterns
AttachmentMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfAttachmentMatchesPatterns
Patterns Messages where an attachment contains text patterns that match the specified regular expressions.

Note: Only the first 150 kilobytes (KB) of the attachments are scanned.

Exchange 2010 or later
Any attachment's content can't be inspected

Any attachment > content can't be inspected
AttachmentIsUnsupported

ExceptIfAttachmentIsUnsupported
n/a Messages where an attachment isn't natively recognized by Exchange, and the required IFilter isn't installed on the Mailbox server. For more information, see Register Filter Pack IFilters with Exchange 2013. Exchange 2010 or later
Any attachment's file name matches

Any attachment > file name matches these text patterns
AttachmentNameMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfAttachmentNameMatchesPatterns
Patterns Messages where an attachment's file name contains text patterns that match the specified regular expressions. Exchange 2010 or later
Any attachment's file extension matches

Any attachment > file extension includes these words
AttachmentExtensionMatchesWords

ExceptIfAttachmentExtensionMatchesWords
Words Messages where an attachment's file extension matches any of the specified words. Exchange 2013 or later
Any attachment is greater than or equal to

Any attachment > size is greater than or equal to
AttachmentSizeOver

ExceptIfAttachmentSizeOver
Size Messages where any attachment is greater than or equal to the specified value.

In the EAC, you can only specify the size in kilobytes (KB).
Exchange 2007 or later
The message didn't complete scanning

Any attachment > didn't complete scanning
AttachmentProcessingLimitExceeded

ExceptIfAttachmentProcessingLimitExceeded
n/a Messages where the rules engine couldn't complete the scanning of the attachments. You can use this condition to create rules that work together to identify and process messages where the content couldn't be fully scanned. Exchange 2013 or later
Any attachment has executable content

Any attachment > has executable content
AttachmentHasExecutableContent

ExceptIfAttachmentHasExecutableContent
n/a Messages where an attachment is an executable file. The system inspects the file's properties rather than relying on the file's extension. Exchange 2013 or later
Any attachment is password protected

Any attachment > is password protected
AttachmentIsPasswordProtected

ExceptIfAttachmentIsPasswordProtected
n/a Messages where an attachment is password protected (and therefore can't be scanned). Password detection only works for Office documents, .zip files, and .7z files. Exchange 2013 or later

Any recipients

The conditions and exceptions in this section provide a unique capability that affects all recipients when the message contains at least one of the specified recipients. For example, let's say you have a rule that rejects messages. If you use a recipient condition from the Recipients section, the message is only rejected for those specified recipients. For example, if the rule finds the specified recipient in a message, but the message contains five other recipients. The message is rejected for that one recipient, and is delivered to the five other recipients.

If you add a recipient condition from this section, that same message is rejected for the detected recipient and the five other recipients.

Conversely, a recipient exception from this section prevents the rule action from being applied to all recipients of the message, not just for the detected recipients.

Note

This condition doesn't consider messages that are sent to recipient proxy addresses. It only matches messages that are sent to the recipient's primary email address.

Condition or exception in the EAC Condition and exception parameters in the Exchange Management Shell Property type Description Available in
Any recipient address includes

Any recipient > address includes any of these words
AnyOfRecipientAddressContainsWords

ExceptIfAnyOfRecipientAddressContainsWords
Words Messages that contain the specified words in the To, Cc, or Bcc fields of the message. Exchange 2013 or later
Any recipient address matches

Any recipient > address matches any of these text patterns
AnyOfRecipientAddressMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfAnyOfRecipientAddressMatchesPatterns
Patterns Messages where the To, Cc, or Bcc fields contain text patterns that match the specified regular expressions. Exchange 2013 or later

Message sensitive information types, To and Cc values, size, and character sets

The conditions in this section that look for values in the To and Cc fields behave like the conditions in the Any recipients section (all recipients of the message are affected by the rule, not just the detected recipients).

Note

This condition doesn't consider messages that are sent to recipient proxy addresses. It only matches messages that are sent to the recipient's primary email address.

Condition or exception in the EAC Condition and exception parameters in the Exchange Management Shell Property type Description Available in
The message contains sensitive information

The message > contains any of these types of sensitive information
MessageContainsDataClassifications

ExceptIfMessageContainsDataClassifications
SensitiveInformationTypes Messages that contain sensitive information as defined by data loss prevention (DLP) policies.

This condition is required for rules that use the Notify the sender with a Policy Tip (NotifySender) action.
Exchange 2013 or later
The To box contains

The message > To box contains this person
AnyOfToHeader

ExceptIfAnyOfToHeader
Addresses Messages where the To field includes any of the specified recipients. Exchange 2007 or later
The To box contains a member of

The message > To box contains a member of this group
AnyOfToHeaderMemberOf

ExceptIfAnyOfToHeaderMemberOf
Addresses Messages where the To field contains a recipient who is a member of the specified group. Exchange 2007 or later
The Cc box contains

The message > Cc box contains this person
AnyOfCcHeader

ExceptIfAnyOfCcHeader
Addresses Messages where the Cc field includes any of the specified recipients. Exchange 2007 or later
The Cc box contains a member of

The message > contains a member of this group
AnyOfCcHeaderMemberOf

ExceptIfAnyOfCcHeaderMemberOf
Addresses Messages where the Cc field contains a recipient who is a member of the specified group. Exchange 2007 or later
The To or Cc box contains

The message > To or Cc box contains this person
AnyOfToCcHeader

ExceptIfAnyOfToCcHeader
Addresses Messages where the To or Cc fields contain any of the specified recipients. Exchange 2007 or later
The To or Cc box contains a member of

The message > To or Cc box contains a member of this group
AnyOfToCcHeaderMemberOf

ExceptIfAnyOfToCcHeaderMemberOf
Addresses Messages where the To or Cc fields contain a recipient who is a member of the specified group. Exchange 2007 or later
The message size is greater than or equal to

The message > size is greater than or equal to
MessageSizeOver

ExceptIfMessageSizeOver
Size Messages where the total size (message plus attachments) is greater than or equal to the specified value.

In the EAC, you can only specify the size in kilobytes (KB).

Note: Message size limits on mailboxes are evaluated before transport rules. A message that's too large for a mailbox will be rejected before a rule with this condition is able to act on the message.

Exchange 2013 or later
The message character set name includes any of these words

The message > character set name includes any of these words
ContentCharacterSetContainsWords

ExceptIfContentCharacterSetContainsWords
CharacterSets Messages that have any of the specified character set names. Exchange 2013 or later

Sender and recipient

Condition or exception in the EAC Condition and exception parameters in the Exchange Management Shell Property type Description Available in
The sender is one of the recipient's

The sender and the recipient > the sender's relationship to a recipient is
SenderManagementRelationship

ExceptIfSenderManagementRelationship
ManagementRelationship Messages where the either sender is the manager of a recipient, or the sender is managed by a recipient. Exchange 2010 or later
The message is between members of these groups

The sender and the recipient > the message is between members of these groups
BetweenMemberOf1 and BetweenMemberOf2

ExceptIfBetweenMemberOf1 and ExceptIfBetweenMemberOf2
Addresses Messages that are sent between members of the specified groups. Exchange 2007 or later
The manager of the sender or recipient is

The sender and the recipient > the manager of the sender or recipient is this person
ManagerForEvaluatedUser and ManagerAddress

ExceptIfManagerForEvaluatedUser and ExceptIfManagerAddress
First property: EvaluatedUser

Second property: Addresses
Messages where either a specified user is the manager of the sender, or a specified user is the manager of a recipient. Exchange 2010 or later
The sender's and any recipient's property compares as

The sender and the recipient > the sender and recipient property compares as
ADAttributeComparisonAttribute and ADComparisonOperator

ExceptIfADAttributeComparisonAttribute and ExceptIfADComparisonOperator
First property: ADAttribute

Second property: Evaluation
Messages where the specified Active Directory attribute for the sender and recipient either match or don't match. Exchange 2010 or later

Message properties

Condition or exception in the EAC Condition and exception parameters in the Exchange Management Shell Property type Description Available in
The message type is

The message properties > include the message type
MessageTypeMatches

ExceptIfMessageTypeMatches
MessageType Messages of the specified type.

Note: When Outlook or Outlook Web App is configured to forward a message, the ForwardingSmtpAddress property is added to the message. The message type isn't changed to AutoForward.

Exchange 2010 or later
The message is classified as

The message properties > include this classification
HasClassification

ExceptIfHasClassification
MessageClassification Messages that have the specified message classification. This is a custom message classification that you can create in your organization by using the New-MessageClassification cmdlet. Exchange 2007 or later
The message isn't marked with any classifications

The message properties > don't include any classification
HasNoClassification

ExceptIfHasNoClassification
n/a Messages that don't have a message classification. Exchange 2010 or later
The message has an SCL greater than or equal to

The message properties > include an SCL greater than or equal to
SCLOver

ExceptIfSCLOver
SCLValue Messages that are assigned a spam confidence level (SCL) that's greater than or equal to the specified value. Exchange 2007 or later
The message importance is set to

The message properties > include the importance level
WithImportance

ExceptIfWithImportance
Importance Messages that are marked with the specified Importance level. Exchange 2007 or later

Message headers

Note

The search for words or text patterns in the subject or other header fields in the message occurs after the message has been decoded from the MIME content transfer encoding method that was used to transmit the binary message between SMTP servers in ASCII text. You can't use conditions or exceptions to search for the raw (typically, Base64) encoded values of the subject or other header fields in messages.

Condition or exception in the EAC Condition and exception parameters in the Exchange Management Shell Property type Description Available in
A message header includes

A message header > includes any of these words
HeaderContainsMessageHeader and HeaderContainsWords

ExceptIfHeaderContainsMessageHeader and ExceptIfHeaderContainsWords
First property: MessageHeaderField

Second property: Words
Messages that contain the specified header field, and the value of that header field contains the specified words.

The name of the header field and the value of the header field are always used together.
Exchange 2007 or later
A message header matches

A message header > matches these text patterns
HeaderMatchesMessageHeader and HeaderMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfHeaderMatchesMessageHeader and ExceptIfHeaderMatchesPatterns
First property: MessageHeaderField

Second property: Patterns
Messages that contain the specified header field, and the value of that header field contains the specified regular expressions.

The name of the header field and the value of the header field are always used together.
Exchange 2007 or later

Conditions and exceptions for transport rules on Edge Transport servers

The conditions and exceptions that are available in transport rules on Edge Transport servers are a small subset of what's available on Mailbox servers. There's no EAC on Edge Transport servers, so you can only manage transport rules in the Exchange Management Shell on the local Edge Transport server. The conditions and exceptions are described in the following table. The properties types are described in the Property types section.

Condition and exception parameters in the Exchange Management Shell Property type Description Available in
AnyOfRecipientAddressContainsWords

ExceptIfAnyOfRecipientAddressContainsWords
Words Messages that contain the specified words in the To, Cc, or Bcc fields.

When a message contains the specified recipient, the rule action is applied (or not applied) to all recipients of the message. For example, the message is rejected for all recipients of the message, not just for the specified recipient.
Exchange 2013 or later
AnyOfRecipientAddressMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfAnyOfRecipientAddressMatchesPatterns
Patterns Messages where the To, Cc, or Bcc fields contain text patterns that match the specified regular expressions.

When a message contains the specified recipient, the rule action is applied (or not applied) to all recipients of the message. For example, the message is rejected for all recipients of the message, not just for the specified recipient.
Exchange 2013 or later
AttachmentSizeOver

ExceptIfAttachmentSizeOver
Size Messages with attachments where any attachment is greater than or equal to the specified value. Exchange 2007 or later
FromAddressContainsWords

ExceptIfFromAddressContainsWords
Words Messages that contain the specified words in the sender's email address. Exchange 2007 or later
FromAddressMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfFromAddressMatchesPatterns
Patterns Messages where the sender's email address contains text patterns that match the specified regular expressions. Exchange 2007 or later
FromScope

ExceptIfFromScope
UserScopeFrom Messages that are sent by either internal senders or external senders. Exchange 2007 or later
HeaderContainsMessageHeader and HeaderContainsWords

ExceptIfHeaderContainsMessageHeader and ExceptIfHeaderContainsWords
First property: MessageHeaderField

Second property: Words
Messages that contain the specified header field, and the value of that header field contains the specified words.

The name of the header field and the value of the header field are always used together.
Exchange 2007 or later
HeaderMatchesMessageHeader and HeaderMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfHeaderMatchesMessageHeader and ExceptIfHeaderMatchesPatterns
First property: MessageHeaderField

Second property: Patterns
Messages that contain the specified header field, and the value of that header field contains the specified regular expressions.

The name of the header field and the value of the header field are always used together.
Exchange 2007 or later
MessageSizeOver

ExceptIfMessageSizeOver
Size Messages where the total size (message plus attachments) is greater than or equal to the specified value. Exchange 2013 or later
SCLOver

ExceptIfSCLOver
SCLValue Messages that are assigned an SCL that's greater than or equal to the specified value. Exchange 2007 or later
SubjectContainsWords

ExceptIfSubjectContainsWords
Words Messages that contain the specified words in the Subject field. Exchange 2007 or later
SubjectMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfSubjectMatchesPatterns
Patterns Messages where the Subject field contains text patterns that match the specified regular expressions. Exchange 2007 or later
SubjectOrBodyContainsWords

ExceptIfSubjectOrBodyContainsWords
Words Messages that contain the specified words in the Subject field or message body. Exchange 2007 or later
SubjectOrBodyMatchesPatterns

ExceptIfSubjectOrBodyMatchesPatterns
Patterns Messages where the Subject field or message body contain text patterns that match the specified regular expressions. Exchange 2007 or later

Property types

The property types that are used in conditions and exceptions are described in the following table.

Note

If the property is a string, trailing spaces are not allowed.

Property type Valid values Description
ADAttribute Select from a predefined list of Active Directory attributes You can check against any of the following Active Directory attributes:
  • City
  • Company
  • Country
  • CustomAttribute1 - CustomAttribute15
  • Department
  • DisplayName
  • Email
  • FaxNumber
  • FirstName
  • HomePhoneNumber
  • Initials
  • LastName
  • Manager
  • MobileNumber
  • Notes
  • Office
  • OtherFaxNumber
  • OtherHomePhoneNumber
  • OtherPhoneNumber
  • PagerNumber
  • PhoneNumber
  • POBox
  • State
  • Street
  • Title
  • UserLogonName
  • ZipCode

In the EAC, to specify multiple words or text patterns for the same attribute, separate the values with commas. For example, the value San Francisco,Palo Alto for the City attribute looks for "City equals San Francisco" or City equals Palo Alto".

In the Exchange Management Shell, use the syntax "AttributeName1:Value1,Value 2 with spaces,Value3...","AttributeName2:Word4,Value 5 with spaces,Value6...", where Value is the word or text pattern that you want to match.

For example, "City:San Francisco,Palo Alto" or "City:San Francisco,Palo Alto","Department:Sales,Finance".

When you specify multiple attributes, or multiple values for the same attribute, the or operator is used. Don't use values with leading or trailing spaces.

Note that the Country attribute requires the ISO 3166-1 two-letter country code value (for example, DE for Germany). For more information, see Country Codes - ISO 316.

Addresses Exchange recipients Depending on the nature of the condition or exception, you might be able to specify any mail-enabled object in the organization (for example, recipient-related conditions), or you might be limited to a specific object type (for example, groups for group membership conditions). And, the condition or exception might require one value, or allow multiple values.

In the Exchange Management Shell, separate multiple values by commas.

Note: This condition doesn't consider messages that are sent to recipient proxy addresses. It only matches messages that are sent to the recipient's primary email address.
CharacterSets Array of character set names One or more content character sets that exist in a message. For example:
  • Arabic/iso-8859-6
  • Chinese/big5
  • Chinese/euc-cn
  • Chinese/euc-tw
  • Chinese/gb2312
  • Chinese/iso-2022-cn
  • Cyrillic/iso-8859-5
  • Cyrillic/koi8-r
  • Cyrillic/windows-1251
  • Greek/iso-8859-7
  • Hebrew/iso-8859-8
  • Japanese/euc-jp
  • Japanese/iso-022-jp
  • Japanese/shift-jis
  • Korean/euc-kr
  • Korean/johab
  • Korean/ks_c_5601-1987
  • Turkish/windows-1254
  • Turkish/iso-8859-9
  • Vietnamese/tcvn
DomainName Array of SMTP domains For example, contoso.com or eu.contoso.com.

In the Exchange Management Shell, you can specify multiple domains separated by commas.
EvaluatedUser Single value of Sender or Recipient Specifies whether the rule is looking for the manager of the sender or the manager of the recipient.
Evaluation Single value of Equal or Not equal (NotEqual) When comparing the Active Directory attribute of the sender and recipients, this specifies whether the values should match, or not match.
Importance Single value of Low, Normal, or High The Importance level that was assigned to the message by the sender in Outlook or Outlook Web App.
IPAddressRanges Array of IP addresses or address ranges You enter the IPv4 addresses using the following syntax:
  • Single IP address: For example, 192.168.1.1.
  • IP address range: For example, 192.168.0.1-192.168.0.254.
  • Classless InterDomain Routing (CIDR) IP address range: For example, 192.168.0.1/25.


In the Exchange Management Shell, you can specify multiple IP addresses or ranges separated by commas.
ManagementRelationship Single value of Manager or Direct report(DirectReport) Specifies the relationship between the sender and any of the recipients. The rule checks the Manager attribute in Active Directory to see if the sender is the manager of a recipient, or if the sender is managed by a recipient.
MessageClassification Single message classification In the EAC, you select from the list of message classifications that you've created.

In the Exchange Management Shell, you use the Get-MessageClassification cmdlet to identify the message classification. For example, use the following command to search for messages with the Company Internal classification and prepend the message subject with the value CompanyInternal.

New-TransportRule "Rule Name" -HasClassification @(Get-MessageClassification "Company Internal").Identity -PrependSubject "CompanyInternal"
MessageHeaderField Single string Specifies the name of the header field. The name of the header field is always paired with the value in the header field (word or text pattern match).

The message header is a collection of required and optional header fields in the message. Examples of header fields are To, From, Received, and Content-Type. Official header fields are defined in RFC 5322. Unofficial header fields start with X- and are known as X-headers.
MessageType Single message type value Specifies one of the following message types:
  • Automatic reply (OOF)
  • Auto-forward (AutoForward)
  • Encrypted
  • Calendaring
  • Permission controlled (PermissionControlled)
  • Voicemail
  • Signed
  • Approval request (ApprovalRequest)
  • Read receipt (ReadReceipt)

Note: When Outlook or Outlook Web App is configured to forward a message, the ForwardingSmtpAddress property is added to the message. The message type isn't changed to AutoForward.

Patterns Array of regular expressions Specifies one or more regular expressions that are used to identify text patterns in values. For more information, see Regular Expression Syntax.

In the Exchange Management Shell, you specify multiple regular expressions separated by commas, and you enclose each regular expression in quotation marks (").
SCLValue One of the following values:
  • Bypass spam filtering (-1)
  • Integers 0 through 9
Specifies the spam confidence level (SCL) that's assigned to a message. A higher SCL value indicates that a message is more likely to be spam.
SensitiveInformationTypes Array of sensitive information types Specifies one or more sensitive information types that are defined in your organization. For a list of built-in sensitive information types, see What the sensitive information types in Exchange 2013 look for.

In the Exchange Management Shell, use the syntax @{<SensitiveInformationType1>},@{<SensitiveInformationType2\>},.... For example, to look for content that contains at least two credit card numbers, and at least one ABA routing number, use the value @{Name="Credit Card Number"; minCount="2"},@{Name="ABA Routing Number"; minCount="1"}.
Size Single size value Specifies the size of an attachment or the whole message.

In the EAC, you can only specify the size in kilobytes (KB).

In the Exchange Management Shell, when you enter a value, qualify the value with one of the following units:
  • B (bytes)
  • KB (kilobytes)
  • MB (megabytes)
  • GB (gigabytes)


For example, 20MB

Unqualified values are typically treated as bytes, but small values may be rounded up to the nearest kilobyte.
UserScopeFrom Single value of Inside the organization (InOrganization) or Outside the organization (NotInOrganization) A sender is considered to be inside the organization if either of the following conditions is true:
  • The sender is a mailbox, mail user, group, or mail-enabled public folder that exists in the organization's Active Directory.
  • The sender's email address is in an accepted domain that's configured as an authoritative domain or an internal relay domain, and the message was sent or received over an authenticated connection. For more information about accepted domains, see Accepted domains.


A sender is considered to be outside the organization if either of the following conditions is true:
  • The sender's email address isn't in an accepted domain.
  • The sender's email address is in an accepted domain that's configured as an external relay domain.

Note: To determine whether mail contacts are considered to be inside or outside the organization, the sender's address is compared with the organization's accepted domains.

UserScopeTo One of the following values:
  • Inside the organization (InOrganization)
  • Outside the organization (NotInOrganization)
  • In an external partner organization (ExternalPartner)
  • In an external non-partner organization (ExternalNonPartner)
A recipient is considered to be inside the organization if either of the following conditions is true:
  • The recipient is a mailbox, mail user, group, or mail-enabled public folder that exists in the organization's Active Directory.
  • The recipient's email address is in an accepted domain that's configured as an authoritative domain or an internal relay domain, and the message was sent or received over an authenticated connection.


A recipient is considered to be outside the organization if either of the following conditions is true:
  • The recipient's email address isn't in an accepted domain.
  • The recipient's email address is in an accepted domain that's configured as an external relay domain.


External partner organizations are external domains where you've configured Domain Security (mutual TLS authentication) to send mail.

External non-partner organizations are all other external domains that aren't considered partner domains.
Words Array of strings Specifies one or more words to look for. The words aren't case-sensitive, and can be surrounded by spaces and punctuation marks. Wildcards and partial matches aren't supported.

For example, "contoso" matches " Contoso.". However, if the text is surrounded by other characters, it isn't considered a match. For example, "contoso" doesn't match the following values:
  • Acontoso
  • Contosoa
  • Acontosob


The asterisk (*) is treated as a literal character, and isn't used as a wildcard character.

For more information

Transport rules in Exchange 2013

Transport rule actions in Exchange 2013

Transport rule procedures in Exchange 2013

Mail flow rule conditions and exceptions (predicates) in Exchange Online