Running out of space on Gmail? Get It Back in 5 minutes
While Google does offer around 7.5 GB of free storage space on Gmail,
you can quickly exhaust that limit if you are not regular about
deleting email messages that include large attachments.
Why Clear Space in your Gmail Account
When
you exhaust the allocated storage limit on your Gmail account, you
won’t be able to compose and send new emails from Gmail unless you clear
out some space by deleting old mails. Going forward, all incoming
messages will also get returned to the sender thus breaking your contact
with the outside world. (Read more on Gmail Limits)
Never Exceed your Mail Quota Again
Once you run out of storage space on Gmail, there are two options – either purchase storage
(at around $20 per 10 GB) or reclaim space on the Gmail hard drive by
deleting large (and useless) emails. Let’s go with the latter approach
since it’s both free and easy.
Step 1: Enable IMAP in your Gmail account (from Settings – > Forwarding and POP/IMAP) and then configure Outlook (or any mail client like Thunderbird, Live Mail, etc.) to download only your Gmail message headers. There’s
no need to download the full message body as it may take days (if not
weeks) to download 7 GB of mails on a slow web connection.
Step 2:
Press Alt+Ctrl+S in Outlook to access your Send-Receive settings page.
Subscribe to the "All Mail" folder of Gmail and choose “Download
Headers” only. Make sure no other Gmail folder label is selected in Outlook.
Step 3:
Now sync your Microsoft Outlook folder with that of Gmail by hitting F9
or the Send/Receive button in your email client. I had about 5,000
messages in my Gmail account and it took only a couple of minutes to
download them all locally (headers only).
Step 4:
Expand the All Mail folder under Gmail in Outlook and sort the email
messages by size. Select the messages you want to delete (use the
control key to select non-consecutive mail) and drag them in the Trash
sub-folder of Gmail under Outlook. Press F9 to re-sync Gmail and
Outlook.
Now login to your Gmail (or Google Apps for Gmail) account via the web browser and just empty the trash.
Backup Attachments before Moving to Trash
*If
you like to backup Gmail messages before deleting them permanently,
just right click the corresponding messages in Outlook and select "Mark
to Download Messages" – Outlook will download the full message body
along with file attachments during the next sync and you may drag them
out on the desktop or just move to another local folder in Outlook.
*For Gmail users who like to reclaim space without using a desktop mail client, check this previous guide – Control your GMail Inbox size
Thankyou@dattu.
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