"Every new Google email account comes with 15GB of free storage -- a solid offer at no cost. However, that space can fill up fast, especially since it also covers files in Google Drive and Google Photos. If your inbox is cluttered with unread newsletters and sneaky spam, there's a way to clean house without losing important messages. With the right approach, you can preserve what matters while giving yourself a fresh start."
"There is always the option of manually cleaning your Gmail inbox or downloading content to your local drive. What a pain, though, right? And, chances are, you'll only eliminate so much junk before those gigabytes start stacking up again. I should note that Google offers a way to pay for more storage by upgrading to a Google One account. The "Basic" plan costs $24 per year for 100GB."
Each new Google account includes 15GB of free storage shared across Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Photos. Inbox clutter from unread newsletters and spam can consume that storage quickly. Creating a separate archive account and moving older messages into it frees 15GB on the primary account while preserving important emails. Back up Drive and Photos using Google Takeout and store exports locally or on an external hard drive before migration. Implement POP3 forwarding on the original account to transfer messages to the archive account. Paying for Google One remains an option, but archiving offers a free alternative to reset storage capacity.
Read at ZDNET
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