Connect to Office 365 services with multifactor authentication (MFA) and PowerShell
Multifactor authentication (MFA) is an Office 365 security best practice, especially for administrator accounts. The Office 365 portal enforces MFA for accounts that have it enabled, but administrators also use PowerShell to manage Office 365.
To connect to Office 365 services with MFA and PowerShell:
- For the Azure Active Directory (AD) tenant with the Windows Azure Active Directory Module (cmdlets have “Msol” in their name), see Connect to Office 365 PowerShell.
- For the Azure AD tenant with the Azure Active Directory V2 module (cmdlets have “AzureAD” in their name), see Connect with the Azure Active Directory V2 PowerShell module.
- For Exchange Online, see Connect to Exchange Online PowerShell using multi-factor authentication.
- For SharePoint Online, see Connect to SharePoint Online PowerShell.
- For Skype for Business Online, see Connect to Skype for Business Online.
- For the Security & Compliance Center, see Connect to Office 365 Security & Compliance Center PowerShell using multi-factor authentication.
For each of these connections, you are prompted with a dialog box to collect the account user name and password and then an additional dialog box for MFA information, such as a verification code. Here is an example for SharePoint Online:
To experiment with MFA in an Office 365 trial subscription, see Multi-factor authentication for your Office 365 dev/test environment.
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