Now, it’s as easy as just looking at the properties of the user object:Īs the name of the property (and it members) suggests, we are effectively looking at the last entry for said user in the sign-in logs, and you can easily confirm this by opening the Azure AD blade -> Sign-ins and filtering it: ![]() ![]() Up until now, this was only possible by crawling the Azure AD sign-in logs or the Unified audit log in the Security and Compliance Center, which was doable, but unnecessary complicated task. ![]() After a long, long wait, Microsoft is finally addressing one of the most common requests from Office 365/Microsoft 365/Azure AD admins – the ability to easily check when was the last time a given user logged in to the service.
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