Mozilla Thunderbird
Mozilla Thunderbird | |
---|---|
![]() Logo used since 2023 | |
![]() Mozilla Thunderbird 115 showing the mail inbox | |
Developer(s) |
|
Initial release | July 28, 2003 |
Stable release | 140.0.1esr[1] ![]() |
Preview release | 141.0beta[2] ![]() |
feed reader | |
License | MPL-2.0[7] |
Website | www |
Mozilla Thunderbird is a
Overview
General
Thunderbird is an e-mail, newsgroup, news feed, and instant messaging client with
Thunderbird supports a variety of
With contributors all over the world, Thunderbird has been translated into more than 65 languages,
Thunderbird Mobile
On 13 June 2022, it was announced that the Android app K-9 Mail had been taken over by MZLA Technologies Corporation, a subsidiary of the Mozilla Foundation. The plan was for K-9 Mail to be rebranded as Thunderbird for Android, including sync with Thunderbird on PC, integrating Thunderbird's automated account setup system, message filtering, and improvements to folders.[12]
On 30 October 2024, the first stable release of Thunderbird for Android (Thunderbird Mobile) was launched as version 8.0.[13] On 6 May 2025, the stable version 10 and the beta of version 11 were released.[14] Thunderbird for Android can be installed via Google Play and F-Droid, among others.[15]
Email features
Message management
Thunderbird manages multiple email, newsgroup, and news feed accounts and supports multiple identities within accounts. Features such as quick search, saved search folders ("virtual folders"), advanced message filtering, message grouping, and tags help manage and find messages. On Linux-based systems, system mail (movemail) accounts were supported until version 91.0.[16] Thunderbird provides basic support for system-specific new email notifications and can be extended with advanced notification support using an add-on.[17]
Junk filtering
Thunderbird incorporates a
Standards support
Thunderbird follows industry standards for email:
- POP. Basic email retrieval protocol.
- IMAP. Thunderbird has implemented many of the capabilities in IMAP, in addition to adding their own extensions and the de facto standards by Google and Apple.[19]
- LDAP address auto-completion.
- S/MIME: Inbuilt support for email encryption and signing using X.509 keys provided by a centralized certificate authority.
- .
Authentication support
Email providers have increasingly adopted OAuth authentication in addition, or instead of, more traditional authentication methods, most notably by Gmail and Outlook. Thunderbird has full support for OAuth authentication and provides instructions for Outlook users transitioning from Outlook's now-deprecated "basic authentication".[22]
File formats supported
Thunderbird provides mailbox format support using plugins, but this feature is not yet enabled due to related work in progress.[23] The mailbox formats supported as of July 2014[update] are:
- mbox – Unix mailbox format (one file holding many emails)
- maildir – known as maildir-lite (one file per email). As of August 2019[update] "there are still many bugs", so this is disabled by default.[24]
Thunderbird also uses Mork and (since version 3) MozStorage (which is based on SQLite) for its internal database. Mork was due to be replaced with MozStorage in Thunderbird 3.0,[25] but the 8.0 release still uses the Mork file format.
Large file linking
Since version 13, Thunderbird has integrated support for uploading files to online file storage services. Users can link large files instead of attaching them directly to the email message. Supported providers included Ubuntu One and Dropbox.[26] Currently, file linking can be used through add-ons or by connecting to a WebDAV provider.[27]
HTML formatting and code insertion
Thunderbird provides a

Markdown support is provided through the Markdown Here Revival add-on.[28]
Security
Thunderbird provides security features such as
Other security features may be added through extensions. Up to version 68, the
Optional security protections also include disabling loading of remote images within messages, enabling only specific media types (sanitizer), and disabling JavaScript.
The
Limitations and known issues
As with any software, there may be limitations to the number and sizes of files and objects represented. For example,
Other features

![]() | This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2023) |
While primarily used as an email client, Thunderbird is also a news aggregator, which is named News Feeds and Blogs in the application. It supports RSS and more recently added Atom as well.[31]
The software has a chat client for instant messaging, supporting the IRC, XMPP, and (since version 102) Matrix protocols,[32] and the Odnoklassniki network. In the past, it also had support for Twitter, Google Talk and Facebook Chat.[33]
Thunderbird is also a
As of version 91, Thunderbird introduced a built-in
Cross-platform support

Thunderbird runs on a variety of platforms. Releases available on the primary distribution site support the following operating systems:[36]
Unofficial ports are available for:
Ports for older versions available for OS/2 (including ArcaOS and eComStation).[39][40]
The source code is freely available and can be compiled to be run on a variety of other architectures and operating systems.
Android and iOS versions
In June 2022, the Thunderbird project announced that it would be collaborating with email client K-9 for Android to build a Thunderbird version for Android.[41] To this end, K-9 lead developer Christian Ketterer joined the Thunderbird team in 2022. The plan was to transform K-9 Mail into Thunderbird on Android, including the respective name change and adoption of the Thunderbird branding. As soon as K-9 Mail had been brought into alignment with Thunderbird's feature set and visual appearance, this changeover would take place, according to Thunderbird's Jason Evangelho.
In the 2022 Financial Report published on May 8th, 2023, Ryan Sipes (Product and Business Development Manager) mentions plans of hiring an iOS developer later that same year to start laying the foundation for Thunderbird on iOS.[42]
On 30 October 2024, the first stable release of Thunderbird for Android (Thunderbird Mobile) was launched as version 8.0.[13] Thunderbird for Android can be installed via Google Play and F-Droid, among others.[43] The Thunderbird team had planned in 2022 to maintain K-9 for one year after the release of Thunderbird Mobile, i.e. until roughly October 2025.[44]
On 6 May 2025, the stable version 10 of Thunderbird Mobile and the beta of version 11 were released.[45]
Release compatibility
Operating system | Latest stable version | Support status | |
---|---|---|---|
Windows | 10 and later, Server 2016 and later | 140.0.1 (x64) | 2018–present |
140.0.1esr (x64) | |||
140.0.1 (IA-32) | 2015–present | ||
140.0.1esr (IA-32) | |||
7, Server 2008 R2, 8, Server 2012, 8.1 and Server 2012 R2 |
115.18.0esr (x64) | 2018–2024 | |
115.18.0esr (IA-32) | 2009–2024 | ||
XP, Server 2003, Vista and Server 2008 |
52.9.1 (IA-32)[46] | 2004–2018 | |
2000 | 12.0.1 | 2004–2012 | |
10.0.12esr | 2004–2013 | ||
NT 4.0 (IA-32), 98 and Me | 2.0.0.24 | 2004–2010 | |
95 | 1.5.0.14 | 2004–2007 | |
macOS | 11 (ARM64) and later | 140.0.1 | 2021–present |
140.0.1esr | |||
10.15 (x64) and later | 140.0.1 | 2019–present | |
140.0.1esr | |||
10.12–10.14 | 115.18.0esr | 2016–2024 | |
10.9–10.11 | 78.14.0 | 2013–2021 | |
10.6–10.8 | 45.8.0 | 2009–2017 | |
10.5 (IA-32 and x64) | 16.0.2 | 2007–2012 | |
10.0.12esr | 2007–2013 | ||
10.4 (IA-32 and PPC)–10.5 (PPC) | 3.1.20 | 2005–2012 | |
10.2–10.3 | 2.0.0.24 | 2004–2010 | |
10.1
|
1.0.8 | 2004–2006 | |
Linux (X11/Wayland) | 140.0.1 (x64) | 2011–present | |
140.0.1esr (x64) | |||
140.0.1 (IA-32) | 2004–present | ||
140.0.1esr (IA-32) |
Unofficial ports
Operating system | Latest stable version | Support status | |
---|---|---|---|
Solaris | 11 | 128.11.0esr (x64, SPARC V9) | 2011– |
10 and OpenSolaris | 52.9.1 (IA-32, x64, SPARC V9) | 2005–2018 | |
8–9 | 2.0.0.24 (IA-32, SPARC V9) | 2004–2010 | |
HP-UX | 11i v1–v3 | [47] | 2.0.0.24 (IA-64, PA-RISC)N/A |
FreeBSD (Tier 1) | 13 and later | 140.0.1 (x64, ARM64) | 2021– |
12 | 115.6.0 (IA-32) | 2018–2024 | |
OpenBSD -stable | 7.7 | 128.12.0esr (x64, ARM64, RISC-V) | 2025– |
6.9 | 78.14.0 (IA-32) | 2021 |
History and development
2003—2010


Originally launched as Minotaur shortly after

On December 7, 2004, version 1.0 was released, and received more than 500,000 downloads in its first three days of release, and 1,000,000 in ten days.[48][49]
Significant work on Thunderbird restarted with the announcement that from version 1.5 onward the main Mozilla suite would be designed around separate applications using this new toolkit. This contrasts with the previous all-in-one approach, allowing users to mix and match the Mozilla applications with alternatives. The original Mozilla Suite continues to be developed as SeaMonkey.
On December 23, 2004, Project Lightning was announced which tightly integrated calendar functionality (scheduling, tasks, etc.) into Thunderbird. Lightning supports the full range of calendar mechanisms and protocols supported by the Mozilla Calendar infrastructure, just as with modern (post-0.2) Sunbird.
On October 11, 2006,
In late 2006,
On July 26, 2007, the Mozilla Foundation announced that Thunderbird would be developed by an independent organization, because the Mozilla Corporation (a subsidiary of the foundation) was focusing on Mozilla Firefox development.[52]
On September 17, 2007, the Mozilla Foundation announced the funding of a new internet communications initiative with David Ascher of ActiveState. The purpose of this initiative was "to develop Internet communications software based on the Thunderbird product, code, and brand".[53]
On February 19, 2008, Mozilla Messaging started operations as a subsidiary of the Mozilla Foundation responsible for the development of email and similar communications. Its initial focus was on the then upcoming version of Thunderbird 3. Alpha Preview releases of Thunderbird 3 were codenamed "Shredder".
2011—2016

On April 4, 2011, Mozilla Messaging was merged into the
Following in the footsteps of Firefox, Thunderbird switched to a rapid release cycle in 2011.[55] Version 4.0 was skipped so as to re-align Thunderbird with Firefox's version 5.0, both released in June 2011.[56] By the end of the year it had reached version 9.0.[57]
On July 6, 2012, a confidential memo from Jb Piacentino, the Thunderbird Managing Director at Mozilla, was leaked and published to TechCrunch.[58] The memo indicated that Mozilla would be moving some of the team off the project and further development of new features would be left up to the community. The memo was slated for release on July 9, 2012. A subsequent article by the Executive Chair of Mozilla, Mitchell Baker, stated Mozilla's decision to make a transition of Thunderbird to a new release and governance model.[59][60] On July 6, 2012, Mozilla announced the company was dropping the priority of Thunderbird development because the continuous effort to extend Thunderbird's feature set was mostly fruitless. The new development model shifted to Mozilla offering only "Extended Support Releases", which deliver security and maintenance updates, while allowing the community to take over the development of new features.
On November 25, 2014, Kent James of the volunteer-led Thunderbird Council announced on the Thunderbird blog that active contributors to Thunderbird gathered at the Mozilla office in Toronto and discussed the future of the application. They decided that more staff were required working full-time on Thunderbird so that the Thunderbird Team could release a stable and reliable product and make progress on features that had been frequently requested by the community.[61]
On December 1, 2015, Mozilla Executive Chair Mitchell Baker announced in a company-wide memo that Thunderbird development needed to be uncoupled from Firefox.[62] She referred to Thunderbird developers spending large efforts responding to changes to Mozilla technologies, while Firefox was paying a tax to support Thunderbird development. She also said that she does not believe Thunderbird has the potential for "industry-wide impact" that Firefox does.[63] Mozilla remained interested in having a role in Thunderbird, but sought more assistance to help with development.[64] Therefore, at the same time, it was announced that Mozilla Foundation would provide at least a temporary legal and financial home for the Thunderbird project.[65]
2017—present


On May 9, 2017, Philipp Kewisch announced that the Mozilla Foundation would continue to serve as the legal and fiscal home for the Thunderbird project, but that Thunderbird would migrate off Mozilla Corporation infrastructure, separating the operational aspects of the project.[66] Mozilla brought Thunderbird back in-house in an announcement on May 9, 2017, and continued to support its development.[67][68] The Thunderbird development team expanded by adding several new members and overhauled security and the user interface.[69]
The interim/beta versions Thunderbird 57 and 58, released in late 2017, began to make changes influenced by
With the release of Thunderbird 68 in August 2019 it now only supports WebExtension addons.
On January 28, 2020, the Mozilla Foundation announced that the project would henceforth be operating from a new wholly owned subsidiary, MZLA Technologies Corporation, in order to explore offering products and services that were not previously possible and to collect revenue through partnerships and non-charitable donations.[79][80]
As of version 78.7.1, Thunderbird will no longer allow installation of addons that use Legacy WebExtensions. Only MailExtensions are now compatible with Thunderbird.[81][82] MailExtensions are WebExtensions but with "some added features specific to Thunderbird".[83]
Thunderbird 91 features various UI improvements (including a new account setup workflow), Apple silicon support, CardDAV address book support, built-in import and export tools for Thunderbird profiles, the PDF.js PDF viewer, and the ability to encrypt emails to BCC recipients.[84][85][86][87]
On June 13, 2022, it was announced that the Mozilla Thunderbird team would take over development of the Android email client app K-9 Mail, with plans for it to eventually become a mobile version of Thunderbird with synchronisation support.[12]
In November 2024, Thunderbird Mobile became available for download,[88] and in December 2024, iodéOS, an open source Android operating system, began including Thunderbird Mobile as the default email client for some 30+ devices.[89]
Releases
Thunderbird development releases occur in three stages, called Beta, Earlybird, and Daily, which correspond to Firefox's Beta, Aurora, and Nightly stages. The release dates and Gecko versions are exactly the same as Firefox; for example, Firefox 7 and Thunderbird 7 were both released on September 27, 2011, and were both based on Gecko 7.0.

Announcement of Thunderbird Pro services
On April 4, 2025, the Thunderbird team announced a future suite of paid, cloud-based services under the name "Thunderbird Pro". The announcement positioned the new services as an open-source, privacy-focused ecosystem to compete with integrated platforms like Google Workspace and Microsoft 365. The team clarified that the core Thunderbird email application will remain free of charge and that the Pro services are an optional, separate offering designed to provide features not possible in a client-only application, such as server-side processing and storage.
The stated business model is a subscription-based service to cover infrastructure costs, with plans to introduce a limited free tier once the service is sustainable. The announcement emphasized that all components would be open source and built on open standards to avoid vendor lock-in.[90][91][92]
The services announced as part of the Thunderbird Pro suite include:
- Thundermail: An email service, including calendar and contact hosting, intended to provide an ad-free and privacy-respecting alternative to existing providers. The service will offer email addresses at
thundermail.com
ortb.pro
[93][91] as well as support for custom domains. Thundermail will be built on the open-source software stack Stalwart.[91] - Thunderbird Appointment: A scheduling tool allowing users to share a link for others to book meetings on their calendar.[94] As of June 9, 2025, the service is in closed beta.[95]
- Thunderbird Send: An end-to-end encrypted file-sharing service for large files. The project is described as a successor to Firefox Send. The source code for send is published on Github.[96]
- Thunderbird Assist: An experimental, opt-in feature to provide AI capabilities. Developed in partnership with Flower AI, it is designed to use federated learning for on-device processing where possible and confidential remote compute for privacy-preserving server-side processing.[91][97]
At the time of the announcement, Appointment was in a closed beta, Send was in alpha, and a waitlist had been opened for the Thundermail beta.[90]
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{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)