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Mastering Email Management: The Ultimate Guide to Changing Your Gmail Address in 2026

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If you’re one of those folks who chose your Gmail address poorly in the days of your carefree youth, we have some good news. Google has officially announced that you can now change it — at least if you live in the US.

That should be a welcome change for many. After all, Gmail has just celebrated its 22nd anniversary, which means there are more than a few folks who may have opted for fun and whimsical email addresses that don’t work quite as well in a more mature and professional setting, or even those who simply changed their actual names for various reasons who were forced to either live with an address reflecting their old name or abandon their Gmail account to set up a new one.

Although scrapping a Gmail account wasn’t a big problem 20 years ago — and still isn’t an issue for many — it can be a real pain if you’ve built up more than email around it. After all, a Gmail address serves as the login gateway for all of Google’s services, from YouTube to the Play Store — and it often has purchases tied to it that can’t be migrated to a new account.

Thankfully, that’s changing. While it’s only rolling out in the US right now, and Google hasn’t offered any additional details on future expansions, we can hope this will soon come to other countries.

Google began rolling this ability out last year on a trial basis, but it was hit and miss in terms of who could take advantage of it. As of last week, it’s available to all US-based accounts. Google has officially announced it on its blog, complete with a tutorial video and a link to further instructions in its Help Center.

Your digital identity just got an upgrade. You can now change your Google Account username (i.e., the part before @gmail.com), which you use to sign in to apps and services like Gmail, Photos, Drive and more. We started rolling this out last year to help your account grow with you.

To be clear, while Google is officially turning the key for everyone in the US, it’s taking its usual phased approach, and notes that it’s “gradually rolling out to all users” and may not be available to everyone right away. In other words, it’s definitely coming, but if you don’t see the option just yet, you’ll need to check back later.

Users who want to retain their Google Account for other services but drop the Gmail portion may also be able to do so. For example, if you primarily use iCloud or another service like email but want to keep your Google Play and YouTube history from your Gmail account, you can effectively close your Gmail account and use any other email address for your Google Account. While it’s long been possible to do this when setting up a new Google Account from scratch, this allows users to abandon Gmail while retaining the rest of their Google services.

How to Change Your Gmail Address

To start the process of changing your Gmail account name and address, start by navigating to myaccount.google.com/google-account-email in Safari on your Mac or iPhone. From there, click Personal Info at the top left and select Email > Google Account email and look for the Change Google Account email option.

Note that this will only appear if you can change your Google Account email. If it doesn’t show up, that might simply be that the feature hasn’t reached your account yet, or your account isn’t based in the US.

Google’s Help Center provides additional details on potential issues you should look for, such as folks who use Chromebooks or Sign in with Google for non-Google sites, so we’d suggest taking a read through that before proceeding. However, there are a few other important things to know:

  1. Your old Gmail address will never be recycled. If you’re switching to a new Gmail address, your old address is added as an alias. If you’re changing to a non-Gmail account, the address simply ends up in the void. This also means you cannot create a new account using your old address.
  2. Your old Gmail address remains active as an alias, ensuring you never miss a message sent to your original account. All new messages will come from the new address by default, but you can still use the old one anytime you like. However, if you want to stop receiving messages to the old one, you’ll need to create a filter to send them to the trash.
  3. You can only switch to a Gmail address that’s never been used. This ties in with the point above about recycling addresses. For security reasons, Gmail will never reassign an email address that’s been used by someone else, even if that was 20 years ago.
  4. You can revert to your original Gmail address if you change your mind, but there’s an unspecified time limit on how long you’ll be able to do that if you’ve switched to a non-Gmail Google Account.
  5. You can still sign in with your old address to other services like Gmail, Maps, YouTube, Google Play, Drive, etc.
  6. You can only change your Gmail address once per year. This doesn’t apply to changing to non-Gmail Google Accounts.
  7. You can only change your address a total of three times. Combined with the time limit, that means you could accumulate four Gmail addresses that point to the same mailbox over the next three years, but after that you’ll be stuck with those four.

  • It’s important to note that your updated address may not be updated everywhere. Any emails you receive before changing your address will still be sent to the old one, as well as Calendar appointments.
  • Dots in your email address don’t matter. Gmail has always disregarded dots in email account names, meaning that “bobjsmith,” “bob.smith,” and “bob.j.smith” are all considered the same email address. Therefore, you cannot alter the punctuation of your Gmail address by adding or removing dots.

While Gmail made this change, Apple introduced the option for iCloud users to change their primary iCloud email address in 2024 with iOS 18.1, extending it to Mac in macOS 26.4 just last week. Additionally, Apple allows any email address to be used for creating an Apple Account to access iCloud, with the ability to later add an iCloud email address as a secondary address to the primary Apple Account, which can still have a non-iCloud email address.

Apple also ensures that email addresses are not recycled and permits users to retain their base name even as it transitions to new domains. This guarantees that even if you haven’t used your @mac.com or @me.com addresses for years, no one else can claim the @icloud.com version of it.

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