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·4 min read

Gmail Storage Full? Here's What to Delete First (Without Losing Important Emails)

gmailstorageguide

Gmail gives you 15GB of free storage — shared with Google Drive and Google Photos. When it fills up, you can't receive new emails, which can cause you to miss critical messages.

The biggest storage offenders are usually: emails with large attachments (PDFs, images, zip files), newsletter archives from years of subscriptions, and social media notification emails that pile up silently.

To find your biggest storage consumers, search Gmail for "has:attachment larger:5M" to find emails with attachments over 5MB. These are usually the quickest wins for freeing space.

Next, search for "older_than:1y category:promotions" to find old promotional emails. These are almost always safe to delete — if you haven't opened a promotion in a year, you don't need it.

Important: before bulk deleting, make sure you're not losing invoices, tax documents, or important attachments. Search for "invoice" or "receipt" and star anything you need to keep.

For ongoing maintenance, consider tools that automatically identify and clean promotional/marketing emails while protecting invoices and important documents. Gorganizer, for example, uses 1,751+ detection signals to distinguish trash from important emails, and never deletes starred messages, PDFs, or reply threads.

Pro tip: Google Takeout lets you export and archive old emails before deleting them. This way you have a local backup even after freeing up Gmail storage.

Ready to clean your inbox?

Gorganizer scans your Gmail with 1,751+ signals and cleans everything in one click. $4.99, no subscription.

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