Find the Attachments Eating
Your Gmail Storage
Large attachments are the fastest way to hit Gmail's 15GB limit. This guide shows you exactly how to find, review, and delete them — using Gmail's built-in search operators and Gorganizer's automated scanner.
Let Gorganizer Scan and Clean AttachmentsWhy Attachments Are the #1 Cause of Full Gmail Storage
Gmail gives you 15GB of free storage shared across Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Photos. That sounds like a lot — until you realize that a single email with a 25MB video attachment consumes the same storage as approximately 2,500 regular emails.
Most people have hundreds of old emails with large attachments they have already seen and forgotten: marketing PDFs from conferences, ZIP archives from old projects, photo albums sent by family, and promotional catalogs from brands they no longer shop at. These sit in your inbox indefinitely, silently consuming your quota.
The math is stark. If you have 50 emails with 10MB attachments, that is 500MB — over 3% of your entire Gmail quota from 50 emails out of potentially tens of thousands. The 50 biggest attachment emails in a typical inbox account for 40-60% of total storage usage.
How to Find Large Attachments in Gmail
Step 1 — Search for attachments over 5MB
Type this exact query into Gmail's search bar:
has:attachment larger:5mbThis returns every email in your account that has an attachment over 5 megabytes. Sort by size (click the size column header) to see the biggest offenders first.
Step 2 — Target the largest files
Narrow to only the biggest files to prioritize your cleanup:
has:attachment larger:10mbEmails with attachments over 10MB are usually the best candidates for deletion — they consume the most storage and are often old files you no longer need.
Step 3 — Search by file type
Find specific types of attachments using the filename operator:
filename:pdfAll PDF documentsfilename:zipZIP archive filesfilename:mp4Video filesfilename:docxWord documentsGmail Search Operators Cheat Sheet — Attachments
| Search operator | What it finds |
|---|---|
has:attachment larger:5mb | Emails with attachments over 5MB |
has:attachment larger:10mb | Emails with attachments over 10MB |
has:attachment larger:25mb | Emails with attachments over 25MB |
filename:pdf | Emails containing PDF attachments |
filename:zip | Emails containing ZIP archives |
filename:mp4 | Emails containing MP4 video files |
filename:docx | Emails containing Word documents |
has:attachment older_than:2y | Emails with attachments older than 2 years |
has:attachment category:promotions | Marketing emails with attachments |
Suspicious Attachment Types to Watch For
Not all large attachments are just storage problems — some are security threats. Here are the file types that require extra caution.
| File type | Risk level | Recommended action |
|---|---|---|
.exe | Critical | Delete immediately, report as phishing |
.iso | High | Delete unless you explicitly requested one |
.zip / .rar | High | Only open from trusted senders |
.docx / .doc | Medium | Disable macros in Word, scan before opening |
.pdf | Medium | Keep reader updated, open in Google Drive preview |
Let Gorganizer Scan and Clean Attachments
Instead of manually searching for each file type, Gorganizer scans your entire Gmail inbox in one pass — identifying large attachments, suspicious file types, and safe-to-delete emails across 1,751+ detection signals. Important documents (invoices, receipts, starred emails) are always protected.
Free scan included. $4.99 one-time to clean. No subscription.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I find large attachments in Gmail?+
Use the Gmail search operator "has:attachment larger:5mb" to find emails with attachments over 5MB. For even larger files, try "has:attachment larger:10mb". You can also search by file type using "filename:pdf" or "filename:zip".
What types of attachments take up the most Gmail storage?+
The biggest storage consumers are typically video files, ZIP archives, high-resolution images, and large PDF documents. A single video attachment can consume more storage than thousands of regular emails. Focus on finding and reviewing emails with attachments larger than 10MB first.
Is it safe to delete emails with attachments from Gmail?+
Deleted emails go to Gmail's Trash and are recoverable for 30 days. Before deleting, save any important documents (contracts, invoices, tax documents) to Google Drive or your computer first. Never delete starred emails or emails with invoice/receipt keywords without reviewing them first.
Which attachment file types are suspicious?+
The highest-risk attachment types are .exe (executable programs), .iso (disk images), .bat and .cmd (scripts), and .jar (Java applications). Treat unexpected .zip files with caution as they often contain malware. Even PDFs and Word documents can contain malicious macros — only open attachments from senders you trust.
How much Gmail storage do attachments use?+
Gmail provides 15GB of free storage shared across Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Photos. A typical email without attachments is 10-75KB. An email with a 10MB PDF is 133x larger. Most people find that 20-30 large emails with attachments consume as much storage as thousands of regular emails.