Between supermarket promotions and the “latest exceptional markdowns”, our messaging sometimes resembles a shopping mall. Good news: this function on Gmail allows you to clean up instantly.
You only need to look at your inbox on a Monday morning to understand the problem. Even before the first coffee, the emails pile up: private sales, promo codes, shopping alerts, “discounted” trips, sites from which we have ordered only once in 2021 and which clearly refuse to forget us. Over time, finding a real message becomes painful. An important email from work or a medical appointment can easily end up stuck between “40% off swimwear” and a flash promo on air fryers. And the worst part is that we no longer even know how we subscribed to half of these newsletters.
In theory, businesses should make unsubscribing quick and easy. In real life, it’s often a different story. The famous “unsubscribe” link is sometimes written in light gray, hidden at the very bottom of the email after three kilometers of legal notices. And when you click on it, you still have to confirm, re-check a box or wait for a page that loads into nothing. Result: many give up before the end. We let the emails arrive, we sigh a little, then we move on. Until one day Gmail starts showing the little warning about storage space almost full.
To avoid this, there is a Gmail functionality, accessible directly from this address: https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#sub. This page displays all subscriptions linked to your account and classifies them according to the number of emails received recently. Then simply choose the senders you no longer want to hear from.
One point to remember: going directly through Gmail avoids certain pitfalls. Cybersecurity experts regularly warn about false unsubscribe links present in fraudulent emails. Some “unsubscribe” buttons actually redirect to malicious sites. The company DNSFilter also explained in 2025 that one in 644 unsubscribe links led to a dangerous site.
Same caution with third-party applications that promise to clean an entire mailbox automatically. Many require full access to messages to work. “I advise you to think carefully before allowing a third-party tool to access your inbox”explained Thorin Klosowski, security and privacy activist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. “Any tool designed to unsubscribe you would likely need full access to your inbox to work, and unless you read the company’s privacy policy, it’s difficult to know what it will do with the information collected.”








