Hi xio,
For old “standalone” Skype accounts, the key is that you usually
do not need to find a separate legacy Skype login page. Microsoft’s current sign-in accepts a
Skype Name as the login identifier, not only an email address.
Microsoft still documents that Skype sign-in can use
Skype name, email, or phone, and for older Skype accounts whose Skype Name does
not start with
live:, Microsoft says you can sign in to Teams Free with that older Skype Name to find Skype chats/contacts.
Try this first
- Go to Microsoft’s Skype Export Portal from the Microsoft retirement/export article.
- On the Microsoft sign-in screen, enter the old Skype Name, not your email address.
- Use the password you used for that Skype account.
- If it asks to add security info or associate/verify an email, complete that step carefully.
- After signing in, request export of Conversations, Files, or both.
- Check back later on the same export page under Available exports.
Microsoft says export requests are available until
June 15, 2026, but history may become incomplete after
April 1, 2026, and large exports may take up to
30 days.
Important: use the Skype Name, not the display name
The
Skype Name is the actual login ID. For older accounts it may look like:
yourname
Newer Microsoft-created Skype identities often look like:
Code:
live:yourname
live:.cid.xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
For a 2013/2014-era standalone Skype account, try the original Skype username
without live: first.
If you do not remember the Skype Name or password
- Use Microsoft’s account recovery/sign-in helper.
- When prompted, provide the Skype Name, old email addresses, phone numbers, approximate account creation date, contacts, billing details, or old Skype credit/subscription info if you have any.
- Try recovery from a device/location where you previously used Skype, if possible.
- Do not create a new Microsoft account and expect it to contain the old Skype data.
Microsoft’s recovery form can ask for email, phone number, and Skype name, and Microsoft also points users with sign-in problems to its sign-in helper.
If login succeeds but export shows nothing
Also try signing into
Microsoft Teams Free with the same old Skype Name/password. Microsoft says existing Skype users can log in to Teams Free with their Skype credentials and chats/contacts should transfer automatically, though some content types do not migrate.
Bottom line
Use the old
Skype Name directly in the Microsoft login box. A standalone Skype account is no longer accessed through an old separate Skype-only login system; Microsoft’s current authentication should accept the Skype Name as the account identifier. If that fails, recovery is the only realistic route.