How to Set Up Gmail Filters2026 Complete Guide
Gmail filters automatically sort, label, archive, delete, or forward emails based on rules you define. This guide covers every step, every operator, and the fastest way to clean an inbox without building rules one by one.
What Are Gmail Filters?
Gmail filters are automated rules that run on every incoming email before it lands in your inbox. When an email matches your filter criteria — sender, subject, keywords, size, or attachment type — Gmail can automatically apply a label, archive it, mark it as read, delete it, or forward it to another address.
Filters run silently in the background and require zero ongoing attention once set up. They use the same search operators as Gmail search, so any query you can search for, you can turn into a filter.
Gmail supports up to 1,000 filters per account. Once you reach that limit, you must delete old filters before adding new ones.
5 Ways to Use Gmail Filters
The most common reasons people set up Gmail filters — with the query to use.
Delete promotional emails
Automatically trash marketing emails from specific senders before they reach your inbox.
from:newsletter@store.comAuto-archive newsletters
Skip the inbox and archive newsletters automatically so they're findable but not distracting.
subject:(unsubscribe)Label important emails
Instantly label emails from your boss or key clients so they stand out in a crowded inbox.
from:boss@company.comForward to another address
Route specific emails — like support tickets or order confirmations — to a dedicated inbox.
subject:(order confirmation)Mark emails as read automatically
Stop notification emails from racking up unread counts when you don't need to action them.
from:noreply@service.comCombine operators
Chain operators together to make precise rules. For example, match large promotional emails and archive them automatically.
from:promos@ larger:500KStep-by-Step: Create a Gmail Filter
Takes about 2 minutes. Works on desktop Gmail (web). Mobile filters require the web version.
- 1
Open Gmail and click the search bar
Go to mail.google.com and click anywhere in the search bar at the top of the page. - 2
Click "Show search options" (the sliders icon)
On the right side of the search bar you'll see a small sliders icon. Click it to open the advanced search panel with separate fields for From, To, Subject, keywords, date range, and more. - 3
Enter your criteria
Fill in whichever fields apply. Common examples:From a specific sender:From: newsletter@store.comSubject contains keyword:Subject: weekly digestHas the words (body or subject):Has the words: unsubscribe - 4
Click "Create filter"
At the bottom of the advanced search panel, click the “Create filter” button (not the Search button). Gmail will show you a preview of how many existing emails already match. - 5
Choose your actions
Select one or more actions to apply to matching emails:- Delete it — Moves to Trash (30-day recovery)
- Apply the label — Tags emails for easy filtering later
- Skip the Inbox (Archive it) — Removes from inbox without deleting
- Mark as read — Clears the unread badge automatically
- Forward it to — Routes to another email address
- Never send it to Spam — Whitelist a sender
- 6
Check "Apply to matching conversations" for existing emails
By default, new filters only apply to future incoming emails. To retroactively apply the action to emails already in your inbox, check “Also apply filter to matching conversations” before clicking Create filter. Note: this can only be done for one filter at a time.
Useful Gmail Filter Search Operators
These operators work in both the search bar and in filter criteria. Combine multiple operators in one filter for precise targeting.
| Operator | What it matches |
|---|---|
from:sender@example.com | Emails from a specific sender |
subject:(monthly report) | Emails with exact subject phrase |
has:attachment | Emails with any attachment |
larger:10M | Emails larger than 10 MB |
older_than:1y | Emails older than 1 year |
is:unread | Unread emails only |
label:newsletter | Emails with a specific label |
-from:boss@company.com | Exclude emails from a sender (negate with -) |
Gmail Filters Have Limits
You can only create 1,000 filters per Gmail account, and they only apply to new emails unless you manually select existing matches — one filter at a time. Complex rules require multiple filters, and managing hundreds of senders quickly becomes its own full-time job. There's no bulk-import, no AI detection, and no way to retroactively clean thousands of old emails in one pass.
Manual Gmail Filters vs Gorganizer
Both get the job done. Here's how they stack up on the things that matter.
| Feature | Gmail Filters | Gorganizer |
|---|---|---|
| Time to set up | 5–15 min per rule | Zero — auto-detects patterns |
| Handles existing emails | Only with extra checkbox (1 rule at a time) | Yes — cleans entire inbox at once |
| Smart detection | You define every rule manually | 1,050+ signals across 6 scoring modules |
| Maintenance required | Yes — update rules as senders change | None — learns from each clean |
| Cost | Free (your time) | $4.99 one-time |
Skip the Filters — Let Gorganizer Clean in 90 Seconds
Instead of building filters one rule at a time, Gorganizer scans your inbox with 1,050+ scoring signals, identifies junk automatically — newsletters, marketing, old notifications — and deletes them safely. Important emails (invoices, receipts, replies) are never touched. Done in about 90 seconds.