Gmail Storage Calculator
Understand how fast your Gmail storage fills up, what is eating the most space, and exactly how to free it — before you hit the 15 GB limit and can no longer receive emails.
How Gmail Storage Works
Google gives every account 15 GB of free storage — but this is shared across three services simultaneously:
All emails and attachments in your inbox, sent items, spam, and trash.
Files, documents, spreadsheets, and presentations stored in Drive.
Photos and videos backed up from your phone or uploaded manually.
Key insight: If you use Google Photos to back up your phone camera, you may hit the 15 GB limit from Photos alone — leaving almost no room for Gmail. Check your storage split at one.google.com/storage.
Estimate Your Storage Fill Rate
Use these benchmarks to estimate how long until your Gmail is full.
| Email volume | Avg size/email | Monthly usage | Fill time (15 GB) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50 emails/day | 50 KB avg | ~75 MB | ~17 years |
| 100 emails/day | 75 KB avg | ~225 MB | ~5.5 years |
| 200 emails/day | 100 KB avg | ~600 MB | ~2 years |
| 50 emails/day + attachments | 500 KB avg | ~750 MB | ~20 months |
| 100 emails/day + attachments | 1 MB avg | ~3 GB | ~5 months |
These are estimates based on typical email sizes. Actual usage depends on attachment frequency, newsletter subscriptions, and shared storage with Drive and Photos.
What Takes Up the Most Gmail Storage
Emails with large attachments
Very HighA single email with a 25 MB PDF attachment takes as much storage as 500 plain-text emails. If you receive documents, invoices, images, or ZIP files regularly, these accumulate fast. Search: has:attachment larger:5mb
Sent emails with attachments
HighEvery time you send an email with an attachment, a copy is stored in Sent. If you have been sending documents for years, your Sent folder alone can consume several gigabytes.
Newsletter and promotional archives
Medium-HighA newsletter with embedded images can be 200–500 KB. If you receive 10 newsletters per day and never delete them, that is 1.5 GB per year just from newsletters.
Spam and Trash not emptied
MediumGmail keeps spam for 30 days and trash for 30 days before auto-deleting. During that window, they still count toward your storage quota. Emptying these manually frees space immediately.
Social media notifications
Low-MediumFacebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, and Twitter send daily notification emails — often with images and HTML formatting. At 50–100 KB each, 10 per day equals ~450 MB per year.
How to Check Your Current Gmail Storage
This shows your total Google account storage usage broken down by Gmail, Drive, and Photos. You can see exactly which service is consuming the most space.
Scroll to the very bottom of Gmail on desktop. A small text line shows "X GB of 15 GB used" — this reflects your total Google storage, not just Gmail.
In the Gmail search bar, type "has:attachment larger:5mb" to find emails over 5 MB. Sort by size (click the sort options) to see the biggest first.
Click Spam in the sidebar, then Trash. The total count shown gives you an idea of how much space these are consuming. Empty both if you do not need them.
5 Ways to Free Up Gmail Storage
Delete emails with large attachments
This is the highest-impact action. Search Gmail for "has:attachment larger:5mb" to find all emails over 5 MB. Sort by size and delete from largest down. A handful of emails with big attachments can free gigabytes. If you need to keep the documents, download them to your computer first, then delete the email.
Empty Spam and Trash folders
Both folders count toward your 15 GB quota. Click Spam → "Delete all spam messages now." Click Trash → "Empty Trash now." This is instant and risk-free — spam you need to recover is rare, and anything you recently deleted is still visible in Trash before you empty it.
Delete old newsletters and promotions
Search for "category:promotions older_than:1y" to find promotional emails more than a year old. Select all and delete. Repeat for "category:social older_than:6m" for old social media notifications. These are almost always safe to delete — if a promotion is 12+ months old, you have no use for it.
Use Gorganizer to bulk delete thousands at once
Manually hunting through Gmail categories takes hours. Gorganizer scans your entire inbox using 1,200+ detection signals, identifies all junk (newsletters, promotions, automated notifications, marketing), and lets you delete everything in one click — while automatically protecting invoices, receipts, starred emails, and PDF attachments.
Purchase Google One if all else fails
If you genuinely need more storage after cleaning, Google One starts at $1.99/month for 100 GB (shared across Gmail, Drive, and Photos). This is a last resort — most users can recover 5–10 GB through cleaning alone before needing to pay for storage.
Free Up Gmail Storage with Gorganizer
Stop hunting through Gmail manually. Gorganizer detects and deletes thousands of storage-wasting emails in one click — while protecting every invoice, receipt, and important email automatically.
Free Up Gmail Storage Now$4.99 one-time · No subscription · Gmail trash (30-day recovery)
Frequently Asked Questions
How much free storage does Gmail give you?+
Gmail gives you 15 GB of free storage, shared across Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Photos. If you use all three services heavily, you can hit the limit faster than expected.
What happens when Gmail storage is full?+
When storage is full, you cannot send or receive emails. Incoming messages bounce back to senders. You also cannot create new Drive files or back up new photos.
Does deleting emails from Gmail free up storage immediately?+
Deleting emails moves them to Trash, where they stay for 30 days. Storage is only freed once emails are permanently deleted — either by emptying Trash manually or waiting 30 days. To free storage immediately, go to Trash and click "Empty Trash now."
How do I find which emails are taking up the most space?+
Use Gmail search: type "has:attachment larger:5mb" to find large emails. You can also click the small arrow in the search bar, set a minimum size, and search. Sort by size to see the biggest first.
Is it worth paying for Google One storage?+
Only after cleaning first. Most users can recover 5–10 GB by deleting attachments, newsletters, spam, and trash. Only purchase Google One if you genuinely need more space after a thorough cleanup.