Skip to main content

How to mass-delete all your emails on Gmail at once

When your Gmail inbox becomes stuffed with junk, it can be near-impossible to sift through the hay to find the needles. Important emails, crucial documents, and those pictures from the family trip can get buried under mounds of spam and advertisements from shoe companies you never even bought shoes from. Luckily, there’s a few ways to sort through all your Gmail muck to put the spotlight back on what’s important.

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

5 minutes

What You Need

  • Computer, tablet, or phone with web access

Mass-deleting your emails is one of the best things you can do to re-introduce tidiness to your digital mailbox, and we’re here to help. We put together this guide to teach you how to mass-delete your Gmail emails, and you’ll be glad to know that the process is very straightforward.

How to mass-delete all your emails on Gmail at once

Step 1: The first step is to open Gmail in your web browser and log in to your account.

Step 2: At the top, on the left of the refresh button, you will see a box with an arrow next to it. Click on the box to select all the emails. However, clicking the box will only select all the emails from the current page you’re on. For mass deleting all your emails, click on the option that says Select all conversations in Primary. You will find this option in a bar right under the selection box.

Select emails on Gmail using the checkbox.
Digital Trends

Step 3: The last step is to click on the trash can icon once you’ve selected all your emails. It's situated in the same bar as the selection box and the refresh icon.

How to bulk delete Gmail by date range

Gmail also has the option to bulk delete emails by date range. With this feature, you can choose two dates and delete all emails between the specified time period. Here's how to do it.

Step 1: Select the Gmail search box at the top of the page and enter your date range. You do this by using the advanced search operators "before:'" and "after:" with your date entered in YYYY/M/D format. So if you're trying to delete emails between May 1 and December 1, you would enter "before: 2021/5/1 after: 2021/12/1."

Enter a date range to select emails within a specified time.
Digital Trends

Step 2: Select all the emails using the checkboxes, and press the delete key, or the trash icon to remove them. To remove more than the 50 shown on the first page, click on the option that says Select all conversations in Primary. You will find this option in a bar right under the selection box.

How many emails can I delete at a time?

Gmail allows you to delete up to 50 emails at a time. However, you can also delete all the emails associated with a specific subject or label-type. To do so, click the select box. You should see an option pop up that says Select all conversations that match this search. Click this option, and then click the trash can icon to delete all messages related to that particular subject.

Can you delete Promotional and Social messages?

Yes you can. Much like your regular inbox, the Promotional and Social tabs store unique Gmail messages that aren’t quite spam, but may not be considered top priority for your account. Promotional messaging is usually newsletters and promos from companies you’ve purchased products from, while Social delivers messages related to your social media accounts.

Luckily, the deletion process is exactly the same as deleting messages from your main inbox. Just click the Promotions or Social tab, then click the checkbox at the top-left of the page. If you want to delete more than 50 messages at a time, click the option that says Select all conversations in....

What if I accidentally delete an email?

When you delete a message in Gmail, it’s not initially gone forever. Deleted messages actually remain in your trash for 30 days (unless you manually clear the trash contents yourself). To recover your lost message, click the More icon, then click Trash.

Click the checkbox next to the message or messages you want to recover. Then, just click the Move to icon (a folder with a right-facing arrow) to choose where these recovered emails will go.

Editors' Recommendations

Dua Rashid
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Dua is a media studies graduate student at The New School. She has been hooked on technology since she was a kid and used to…
The most common Zoom problems and how to fix them
zoom privacy feature freeze active users meeting office

Is Zoom giving you problems and you're not quite sure how to solve them? Fortunately, troubleshooting Zoom issues doesn't always have to be difficult. You can actually fix quite a few of its problems yourself. To help get your Zoom calls working properly, we’ve collected the most common Zoom problems users face and have provided easy solutions to be able to fix them.

If you also use m or are making the switch to Zoom because of issues with Teams, check out our guide to fixing Microsoft Teams problems; maybe you will find a solution there so you won't have to make the switch.
Webcam or audio not working

Read more
How to schedule an email in Outlook for Mac, Windows, and web
Man in suit jacket using computer in library.

Scheduling an email is a great way to stay on top of important workplace communication, without having to wait to hit send until dawn. This feature is available for just about every major email platform, and today we’re going to cover Outlook’s take on this simple but effective capability.

Read more
What is an RSS feed? Here’s why you should still use one
A person using a HP ENVY x360 2-in-1 15.6-inch Touch-Screen Laptop sitting on a bed.

It can be tough to keep up with what's happening online. You might even try several different ways, including visiting specific websites every day, doing Google searches, or relying on social media timelines and news feeds to keep yourself informed. But another solution that sometimes gets overlooked is an old-school one: The RSS feed.

What is an RSS feed? It's a technology that has influenced many modern internet tools you're familiar with, and its streamlined, algorithm-free format could make it your next great tool for reading what you want online.
What is RSS?
What RSS stands for depends on who you ask. The main consensus is that it stands for "Really Simple Syndication." But you may also hear that it stands for "Rich Site Summary."  At its heart though, RSS essentially refers to simple text files with necessary, updated information -- news pieces, articles, that sort of thing. That stripped-down content gets plugged into a feed reader, an interface that quickly converts the RSS text files into a stream of the latest updates from around the web.

Read more