A knowledge base article about Quickly Clean Out Your Berkeley Email and Reduce Your Google Storage provided by the UC Berkeley IT Service Hub - Knowledge Portal
Reducing your email will reduce your overall Berkeley Google storage usage. If you have lots of emails and/or attachments this will have a significant impact.
This guide provides several ways to reduce your email storage:
Before you reduce your email, it is important to understand that:
Google allows you to delete your emails individually or in bulk from anywhere in Berkeley Google mail (i.e. labels, search results, etc.).
In the search results view, select the emails you want to delete and then click the trash can icon to move them to the Trash.
Note: If you have selected thousands of emails to delete all at once, it could take a while to process. It’s possible that only a portion of the emails you selected will be deleted and you may have to repeat the process until all of the search results are deleted.
Tip: If you use a screen reader, the University of Illinois has developed a Chrome/Firefox bookmarklet to assist with the bulk deletion of mail in Gmail.
Search results for has:attachment larger:10
2. You can also use Advanced Search instead. Note: be sure to check “Has attachment”
Advanced Search View for "has:attachment larger:10MB”
3. From within the search results, select specific emails and delete them individually or select all search results and delete them in bulk.
Note: You cannot delete an attachment without deleting the email it is attached to.
|
When you delete an email in this situation |
Size of attachment |
This happens to the attachment |
|
An email someone sent you with an attachment |
< 25 MB |
The attachment is deleted |
|
An email someone sent you with an attachment |
> 25 MB |
The file will remain in your “Shared with me” Google Drive folder (the sender is the owner of the file, so they can remove your access at any time) |
|
You saved the attachment from your email to your Google Drive |
< 25 MB |
The file will remain in your My Drive (or wherever you put it) folder |
|
An email you sent with an attachment from your Google Drive |
Any size |
The file will remain in your Google Drive |
|
An email you sent with an attachment that was not from your Google Drive |
< 25 MB |
The attachment is deleted from your email and loses its connection to the original email. |
|
An email you sent with an attachment that was not originally in your Google Drive |
> 25 MB |
The attachment was uploaded to your My Drive folder in your Google Drive and will remain there |
Emails in your Spam folder count against your storage limit, so it is good practice to delete these regularly. It may take time for the changes to be reflected in your Berkeley Google storage usage stats. (Note that Spam storage is not reported per se but is part of the mail count.)
Tip: We recommend checking your Spam folder periodically for legitimate emails that may appear there by mistake. (If you do find a message that has been accidentally marked as spam, you can select it and click “Not spam” in the top toolbar or at the top of the message to help ensure that future messages from this sender are not flagged as spam.)
To delete emails from Spam:
Click More to find the Spam folder if it is not visible.
2. Click “Delete all spam messages now.”
3. You can also select specific emails and click “Delete forever.”
Choose Delete forever or Delete all spam messages now
Tip: Deleted email will stay in your Trash for up to 30 days and possibly longer. You will need to empty your Trash in order to free up Google storage space. It may take time for the changes to be reflected in your Google storage usage stats.
To empty your Trash:
Choose Delete forever or Empty Trash now
Note: You may need to empty your Trash several times if there are a lot of emails to delete. You may need to continue to click “Empty Trash now” until no emails remain. Because of this, we recommend deleting content in your Trash incrementally as you move it to the Trash because Google’s deletion process may stall if you are deleting too much at one time.
If you are in the habit of archiving your emails instead of deleting them, you may want to start deleting them instead. Consider archiving email you need to save, along with applying at least one Label and deleting the rest. That way your email stays organized with Gmail Labels which you can use to easily retrieve important emails.