When an internal user reports not receiving Google Calendar event invites, the most likely immediate cause to investigate on the recipient's end is their notification settings within Google Calendar. Users can customize their notification preferences, and it's possible they have turned off email notifications for new events.
Here's why option D is the most relevant first step and why the other options are less likely to be the primary cause of this specific issue:
D. Check whether the event recipient has turned off their email notifications for new events in their Calendar settings.
Google Calendar allows users to configure various notification settings, including whether they receive email notifications for new events, changes to events, reminders, etc. If the recipient has disabled email notifications for new events, they would not receive the invites in their inbox, even though the event might be correctly added to their Calendar.
Associate Google Workspace Administrator topics guides or documents reference: The official Google Calendar Help documentation for users, such as "Change notification settings," explains how users can customize their event notifications. This includes options to turn off email notifications for new events. While administrators don't directly manage individual user's notification settings, understanding these user-level controls is crucial for troubleshooting. An administrator might guide the user to check these settings.
A. Check whether the business hours are set up in the event recipient's Calendar settings.
Business hours in Google Calendar primarily affect meeting scheduling suggestions and how a user's availability is displayed to others. They do not directly prevent a user from receiving event invitations. Whether or not a recipient has configured their business hours will not stop the email notification for a new event from being sent (unless perhaps in very specific and unusual edge cases related to resource scheduling, which isn't indicated here).
Associate Google Workspace Administrator topics guides or documents reference: The Google Calendar Help documentation on "Set your working hours and location" explains the purpose of business hours, which is related to availability and scheduling, not the receipt of invitations.
B. Check if Calendar service is turned off for the event creator.
If the Calendar service is turned off for the event creator, they would not be able to create or send any Calendar events in the first place. Since the user created and sent the invite (as mentioned by the recipient not receiving it), the Calendar service must be active for the creator.
Associate Google Workspace Administrator topics guides or documents reference: The Google Workspace Admin Help documentation on "Turn Google Calendar on or off for users" explains how administrators can control access to the Calendar service. If the service is off for a user, they would not have Calendar functionality.
C. Check whether the Calendar event has more than 50 guests.
While there might be limitations on the number of guests that can be added to a single Calendar event, exceeding this limit typically results in an error message for the event creator during the invitation process, not a failure of the recipient to receive the invite. Even if there were such a limit affecting receipt (which is not a common documented issue for internal users within reasonable limits), it wouldn't be the first thing to check.
Associate Google Workspace Administrator topics guides or documents reference: Google Calendar Help documentation might mention limits on the number of guests, but these limits usually pertain to the ability to add guests, send updates, or view responses, not a complete failure of delivery to some recipients within the organization.
Therefore, the most logical first step in troubleshooting why an internal recipient isn't receiving Calendar event invites is to have the recipient check their own Calendar notification settings to ensure that email notifications for new events are enabled.