Skip to main content

How to Open and Reply to an Encrypted Email

The Vermont Department of Motor Vehicles may communicate with customers through email in response to an inquiry or to obtain additional information or documentation needed to properly answer questions.

Your personal information and your privacy are important to us. If we send you an email that contains or requests personal information, we will encrypt the email to help protect your identity and ensure your information is not accessible by anyone other than you.

We use Microsoft Office 365 Message Encryption. To open an encrypted email, you must be connected to the internet.

There are two methods for opening your encrypted message:

OPTION 1: Use a One-time passcode.
OPTION 2: Use an existing or create a new Microsoft account.


OPTION 1: Use a one-time passcode to open an encrypted message

  1. To open the email, click on the message.html.
  2. Select Use a one-time passcode. You will be redirected to the State of Vermont secure email portal.
  3. You will receive an email with a passcode from 365@messaging.microsoft.com. Open the email.
  4. The message will contain two numbers: a reference code which determines which email the passcode is for and the passcode.
  5. Once you have the passcode, go back to the message.html and enter the passcode into the appropriate field.
  6. Click Continue to open the email. Please note: the passcode will expire in 15 minutes.
  7. You can now view the secure email.


OPTION 2: Using a Microsoft account to open an encrypted message

  1. Open the encrypted message and select Sign in.
  2. After you open the message you will see Message encryption by Microsoft Office 365 and an attachment called message.html. Open the attachment.
  3. Sign in and view the encrypted message.
  4. If you do not have an account, you can create a new Microsoft account from this screen.
  5. Select Create A Microsoft Account For (referenced email address)
  6. Complete the account information form and submit.
  7. You will receive a verification email. Open the email and verify your email address.
  8. Once you have completed the verification, go back to the message.html and use your new Microsoft account to sign in and view the secure email. Please note: if you are inactive for more than 15 minutes, you will be automatically signed out of the encryption portal.


Responding to an encrypted email

  1. Select Reply or Reply All.
  2. Type your response and select Send. An encrypted copy of your message will be sent to you.

Please contact us if you have questions about encrypted emails.

Read more about Personally Identifiable Information (PII).

Featured Article

April 3, 2025

Distracted Driving Awareness Month

WHAT: Distracted Driving Awareness Month Press Conference

WHEN: Wednesday, April 9, 2025, at 11:00 a.m.

WHERE: Vermont State Police Westminster Barracks, 1330 Westminster Heights Road, Westminster

DETAILS:

April is National Distracted Driving Awareness Month. The U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), the Vermont Agency of Transportation’s State Highway Safety Office (SHSO), and Vermont highway safety advocates are launching a high-visibility enforcement effort from April 10-14, 2025, to deter distracted driving. Law enforcement officers nationwide will work together to enforce laws regarding texting and distracted driving, and to remind people to drive with their full attention.

To support this effort, the SHSO will hold a Distracted Driving Awareness Press Conference with representatives from the SHSO, Vermont State Police and other Vermont and New Hampshire law enforcement agencies, Emergency Medical Services (EMS), the American Automobile Association (AAA), and the cellular service carrier AT&T. The goal of the press conference is to bring together public and private stakeholders who dedicate their work to keeping Vermont’s roads safer for all road users and to raise awareness about the risks of distracted driving.

According to NHTSA, in 2022, 3,308 people were killed and an estimated additional 289,310 people injured in traffic crashes involving distracted drivers. Due to data collection limitations, however, we know that these are underestimations. In Vermont, during the past five years (2020-2024), there have been 33 fatalities attributed to distracted driving, which means that 9.6% of all vehicle-related fatalities in Vermont involved a distracted driver.