Exchange Server Versions, Release Date, & Build Numbers Info

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Written By Mohit Kumar Jha
Anuraag Singh
Approved By Anuraag Singh
Published On May 26th, 2025
Reading Time 7 Minutes Reading

It has been almost thirty years since the first of the countless Exchange Server versions was released to the public. Ever since then, it has stood as a cornerstone of business communication.

The on-premise Exchange Server has set the standard for handling day-to-day emails, calendars, and contacts for organizations worldwide. With iterative updates, it has transformed from a simple mail server to a sophisticated collaboration platform.

Let us take a look at its journey, see when the key updates happened, plus the  Exchange build numbers associated with every update.

This information guide will explain Exchange’s evolution from its beginnings in 1996 to the upcoming Subscription Edition.

The Earliest Exchange Server Versions: Foundational Years (1996-1999)

Our first introduction to Exchange Server was with v4.0. This simple yet powerful mail server gave the world many never-seen-before features like the Jet-based MAPI store and native support for X.400 mail.

Moreover, it was also capable of handling Internet mail (SMTP/MIME) via a proprietary Internet Mail Connector (IMC with IMAIL library).

Here are the specifics for Exchange Server 4.0:

Product Release Date Exchange Server Version Numbers
Exchange Server 4.0 RTM Jun 11, 1996 4.0.837
SP1 May 1, 1996 4.0.838
SP2 Jul 19, 1996 4.0.993
SP3 Oct 29, 1996 4.0.994
SP4 Mar 28, 1997 4.0.995
SP5 May 5, 1998 4.0.996

Next among the Exchange Server versions was 5.0. Released just a year later in 1997. Exchange veterans consider it a relatively minor update; even then, it came with all-new (for that time, of course) POP3 mail access. The internal architecture remained identical to the previous v4.0.

Release details for Exchange Server 5.0:

Product Release Date Exchange Build Numbers
Exchange Server 5.0 RTM May 23, 1997 5.0.1457
SP1 Jun 18, 1997 5.0.1458
SP2 Feb 19, 1998 5.0.1460

The real leap in this early era was Exchange Server 5.5 (late 1997). This was a significant upgrade, bringing native IMAP4 support and greatly improving Internet mail processing by optimizing Internet mail (MIME) conversion.

It also came with native public folder enhancements and noticeable improvements to OWA.

Exchange 5.5 was also the last version compatible with Windows NT 4.0.

Version specifics for Exchange Server 5.5:

Product Release Date Exchange Server Version Numbers
Exchange Server 5.5 RTM Feb 3, 1998 5.5.1960
SP1 Aug 5, 1998 5.5.2232
SP2 Dec 23, 1998 5.5.2448
SP3 Sep 9, 1999 5.5.2650
SP4 Nov 1, 2000 5.5.2653

Entering the New Millennium: Active Directory and Web Access (2000-2005)

With the turn of the millennium came Exchange 2000 Server (v6.0). This was a landmark release because it was the first version built to natively use Windows 2000 Active Directory. Exchange 2000 also introduced a fully redesigned Outlook Web Access (OWA) with a richer HTML interface and native calendaring. Moreover, there were added features like better storage management.

However, this version had no support for Windows NT 4.0 (as it ran on Win2K Server/AD).

Details for Exchange 2000 Server:

Product Release Date Exchange Server Version Numbers
Exchange 2000 Server RTM Nov 29, 2000 6.0.4417
SP1 Jun 21, 2001 6.0.4712
SP2 Nov 29, 2001 6.0.5762
SP3 Jul 18, 2002 6.0.6249

Building on this new foundation, Exchange Server 2003 (v6.5) arrived, focusing on performance and manageability. A headline feature was “Outlook Anywhere” (RPC over HTTP) for remote Outlook access.

This included streaming of OWA attachments, memory improvements, and built-in spam filtering. Also added support for MobileFAX and faster mailbox store.

Release information for Exchange Server 2003:

Product Release Date Exchange Build Numbers
Exchange Server 2003 RTM Sep 28, 2003 6.5.6944
SP1 May 25, 2004 6.5.7226
SP2 Oct 19, 2005 6.5.7683

Exchange Server Versions with Roles and Robustness (2007-2012)

Exchange Server 2007 (v8.0) represented a major architectural overhaul, introducing five distinct server roles (Mailbox, CAS, Hub, Edge, UM) with enabled scale-out deployment.

A brand new Unified Messaging (voicemail integration) and integrated anti-spam/anti-virus also became part of the Exchange on-premises servers. Moreover, users got an all-new OWA interface with improved high availability options (CCR, SCR).

Version details for Exchange Server 2007:

Product Release Date Exchange Build Numbers
Exchange Server 2007 RTM Mar 8, 2007 8.0.685.25
SP1 (November Update Rollup) Nov 29, 2007 8.1.240.6
SP2 Aug 24, 2009 8.2.176.2
SP3 Jun 7, 2010 8.3.83.6
UR23 (for SP3) Mar 21, 2017 8.3.517.0

Exchange Server 2010 (v14.0)

Improved upon the 2007 version by adding Database Availability Groups (DAGs) for mailbox HA and site resilience.

Different server roles (like Mailbox, CAS) were merged together. Users could now archive mailboxes and use VoIP, with UM enhancements.

A design refresh made the OWA richer (by adding Conversations, PowerShell-based admin control). There were minor improvements to Exchange Management Shell as well.

Release specifics for Exchange Server 2010:

Product Release Date Exchange Server Version Numbers
Exchange Server 2010 RTM Nov 9, 2009 14.0.639.21
SP1 Aug 23, 2010 14.1.218.15
SP2 Dec 4, 2011 14.2.247.5
SP3 Feb 12, 2013 14.3.123.4
Last SP3 Update (UR32) Mar 2, 2021 14.3.513.0

Start of Modern Exchange Server Versions with MS Exchange 2013

Exchange Server 2013 (v15.0) further streamlined the architecture, reducing server roles and making the Client Access server stateless.

New thin Client Access role with no data rendering. Built-in DLP and deep content analysis for compliance, smart people-centric search, and a refreshed touch-friendly OWA. Edge Transport was reintroduced in SP1 for perimeter security.

Architecture changes defined new roles that replaced RPC for simplified deployments.

Details for Exchange Server 2013:

Product Name Release Date Exchange Server Version Numbers
Exchange Server 2013 RTM Oct 11, 2012 15.0.516.32
CU1 Apr 2, 2013 15.0.620.29
CU2 Jul 9, 2013 15.0.712.24
CU3 Nov 25, 2013 15.0.775.38
SP1 (CU4) Feb 25, 2014 15.0.847.32
CU5 May 27, 2014 15.0.913.22
CU6 Aug 26, 2014 15.0.995.29
CU7 Dec 9, 2014 15.0.1044.25
CU8 Mar 17, 2015 15.0.1076.9
CU9 Jun 16, 2015 15.0.1104.5
CU10 Sep 15, 2015 15.0.1130.7
CU11 Dec 15, 2015 15.0.1156.6
CU12 Mar 15, 2016 15.0.1178.4
CU13 Jun 21, 2016 15.0.1210.3
CU14 Sep 20, 2016 15.0.1236.3
CU15 Dec 13, 2016 15.0.1263.5
CU16 Mar 21, 2017 15.0.1293.2
CU17 Jun 27, 2017 15.0.1320.4
CU18 Sep 19, 2017 15.0.1347.2
CU19 Dec 19, 2017 15.0.1365.1
CU20 Mar 20, 2018 15.0.1367.3
CU21 Jun 19, 2018 15.0.1395.3
CU22 Oct 16, 2018 15.0.1417.2
CU23 Jun 18, 2019 15.0.1497.2
CU23 Aug22SU (Last public SU) Aug 9, 2022 15.0.1497.46

Exchange Server 2016 Version Brought Protocol Enhancements with Cloud Integration (v15.1)

Built upon the already excellent 2013 architecture, this new version was the first to establish MAPI/HTTP as the default Outlook protocol. At the same time, OWA was renamed to “Outlook on the web.” It was not a simple rename, but an all-new web interface with collaboration features (document sharing via OneDrive) and performance gains. Moreover, there were improvements to the hybrid configuration (cloud-updated wizard). Plus, the popular email archiving and compliance features were carried forward from 2013 with minor tweaks.

Version information for Exchange Server 2016:

Product Name Release Date Exchange Build Numbers
Exchange Server 2016 RTM Oct 1, 2015 15.1.225.42
CU1 Mar 15, 2016 15.1.396.30
CU2 Jun 21, 2016 15.1.466.34
CU3 Sep 20, 2016 15.1.544.27
CU4 Dec 13, 2016 15.1.669.32
CU5 Mar 21, 2017 15.1.845.34
CU6 Jun 27, 2017 15.1.1034.26
CU7 Sep 19, 2017 15.1.1261.35
CU8 Dec 19, 2017 15.1.1415.2
CU9 Mar 20, 2018 15.1.1466.3
CU10 Jun 19, 2018 15.1.1531.3
CU11 Oct 16, 2018 15.1.1591.3
CU12 Mar 12, 2019 15.1.1713.5
CU13 Jun 18, 2019 15.1.1779.2
CU14 Sep 17, 2019 15.1.1847.3
CU15 Dec 17, 2019 15.1.1913.5
CU16 Mar 17, 2020 15.1.1979.3
CU17 Jun 16, 2020 15.1.2044.4
CU18 Sep 15, 2020 15.1.2106.2
CU19 Dec 15, 2020 15.1.2176.2
CU20 Mar 16, 2021 15.1.2242.4
CU21 Jun 29, 2021 15.1.2308.8
CU22 Nov 23, 2021 15.1.2375.7
CU23 Apr 20, 2022 15.1.2507.6
CU23 Nov24SU Nov 12, 2024 15.1.2507.41
CU23 Apr25HU Apr 18, 2025 15.1.2507.44

Exchange Server 2019 (v15.2): Security and Performance Focus

Exchange Server 2019 (v15.2) focuses on security and performance, which is seen by the support for Windows Server Core and default TLS 1.2 encryption. Although Unified Messaging was removed, OWA was modernized (Bing-powered search, new look), and performance was improved.

Release specifics for Exchange Server 2019:

Product Name Release Date Exchange Server Version Numbers
Exchange Server 2019 RTM Oct 22, 2018 15.2.221.12
CU1 Mar 12, 2019 15.2.330.5
CU2 Jun 18, 2019 15.2.397.3
CU3 Sep 17, 2019 15.2.464.5
CU4 Dec 17, 2019 15.2.529.5
CU5 Mar 17, 2020 15.2.595.3
CU6 Jun 16, 2020 15.2.659.4
CU7 Sep 15, 2020 15.2.721.2
CU8 Dec 15, 2020 15.2.792.3
CU9 Mar 16, 2021 15.2.858.5
CU10 Jun 29, 2021 15.2.922.7
CU11 Nov 23, 2021 15.2.986.5
CU12 (2022H1) Apr 20, 2022 15.2.1118.7
CU13 (2023H1) Apr 18, 2023 15.2.1258.12
CU14 (2024H1) Feb 13, 2024 15.2.1544.4
CU15 (2025H1) Feb 10, 2025 15.2.1748.10
CU15 Apr25HU Apr 18, 2025 15.2.1748.24

The Next Chapter: Exchange Server Subscription Edition (SE, 2025 and Beyond)

Looking ahead, Microsoft has announced Exchange Server Subscription Edition (SE). This upcoming edition will use the same codebase as the final Exchange 2019 Cumulative Update (CU15) but will shift to a subscription licensing model.

Users will get TLS 1.3 and GUI certificate management in the Import PST to Exchange Server using EAC The Exchange Server SE will run on future Windows Server releases (e.g., Windows Server 2025).

Planned release information:

Product Release Date Exchange Build Numbers
Exchange Server Subscription Edition (SE) Early Q3 2025 (planned) (pending)

An Ever-Evolving Workhorse

Here in this write-up, we saw that from its start in 1996 to this day, there have been many different Microsoft Exchange Server versions. Each update brought in new features and built a service that is now used worldwide for on-premises email management. We saw how Microsoft’s priorities slowly shifted from a local-oriented to a service, which welcomed the cloud. Despite so many different changes, perhaps none would be as impactful as the one that’s happening this year, where the entire model on which Exchange Server operates is being changed from a one-time payment to a subscription-based model.

  author

By Mohit Kumar Jha

Mohit is a writer, researcher, and editor specializing in cloud migration, cybersecurity, and digital forensics. Passionate about these fields, he strives to create well-researched, insightful content that helps readers learn and stay informed.