You can wipe the Promotions tab in Gmail fast by selecting all conversations and sending them to Trash, then clearing Trash when you’re ready.
The Promotions tab can pile up fast. Newsletters you never read. Store coupons that expired last month. “Just checking in” sales emails from brands you bought from one time. It’s clutter, and it can make Gmail feel noisy.
The good news: Gmail gives you a built-in way to delete everything inside Promotions in a few clicks on desktop. You can also target Promotions with a search, so you can delete only what you mean to delete.
Before you swing the hammer, take a breath and scan for the stuff people regret losing: receipts, warranty emails, travel confirmations, password alerts, and account notices. Many of those land in Updates, but some brands send receipts through marketing systems that Gmail sorts into Promotions. A quick check saves headaches.
How Promotions Works In Gmail
Promotions is a category tab inside Gmail’s “Default” inbox view. Gmail sorts messages into tabs like Primary, Social, Promotions, Updates, and Forums. Promotions usually holds deals, offers, and marketing messages. It’s not a folder you created, and it’s not a label you manually applied. It’s Gmail’s sorting layer.
That distinction matters because deleting from Promotions doesn’t “delete a category.” You’re deleting the messages that are currently sitting in that category. New promo mail can still show up later unless you also change your setup.
If you’re the type who prefers one single inbox, you can turn category tabs on or off. Gmail also lets you search within a category using the category: operator, which can be cleaner than scrolling through pages.
Can I Delete All Promotions In Gmail? Steps That Work
If your goal is “delete everything that’s currently in Promotions,” the desktop Gmail site is the smoothest place to do it. Gmail lets you select all messages on the current page, then expand that selection to every conversation in the category before you delete.
Delete Promotions On Desktop
- Open Gmail on a computer and click the Promotions tab.
- Click the checkbox at the top-left of the message list. This selects the conversations on the current page.
- Look for the banner above the message list that offers a link to select every conversation that matches what you’re viewing.
- Click that “select all conversations” link to expand the selection beyond the current page.
- Click the trash can icon to delete.
Gmail moves deleted messages to Trash first. For a period after deletion, you can still pull them back if you deleted something you meant to keep. After that window, messages get permanently removed. Gmail documents this behavior on its delete messages page. Delete messages in Gmail spells out what happens after deletion and how to empty Trash.
Delete Promotions With A Search (Cleaner When Promotions Is Huge)
If Promotions is massive, searching can be faster than loading tab pages. In the Gmail search bar, type:
category:promotions
Press Enter, then use the same select-all flow: checkbox → expand selection to all matching conversations → trash.
Search also lets you narrow the blast radius. A few examples that feel safer than deleting everything:
category:promotions older_than:1y(older promo mail)category:promotions from:newsletter@brand.com(one sender)category:promotions subject:coupon(one theme)
Delete Promotions On Mobile
On phones, you can delete in batches, but the “select all conversations” flow is more limited and slower. If you want to wipe an entire category at once, desktop is the path that usually feels painless.
If you only have mobile access right now, a workable approach is to delete in chunks:
- Open Promotions.
- Long-press one message, then select more messages.
- Delete, then repeat.
It’s not fun, but it works when you can’t get to a computer.
Deleting Promotions In Gmail In Bulk Without Losing Stuff You Need
Bulk deletion is easy. Bulk regret is what you want to avoid. Promotions can contain emails that matter, even if they look like marketing.
Before you delete everything, do a quick “save sweep.” Give yourself five minutes, not an afternoon. You’re looking for a small set of categories of mail:
- Receipts and invoices (especially for higher-cost purchases)
- Warranty and registration confirmations
- Event tickets or QR codes
- Subscription renewal notices you might want later
- Tax documents from payment services or marketplaces
Here’s a fast method that doesn’t require reading a single email:
- Open Promotions.
- Use Gmail’s search bar to find
invoice,receipt,order,warranty,ticket. - For any message you want to keep, apply a label or star it, or move it to Primary if that matches how you work.
- Then run the bulk delete.
If you’d rather stop Gmail from splitting your inbox into tabs at all, Google explains how categories work and how to choose which ones show. Organize your emails into categories also notes that you can search within a category using category:.
Ways To Clear Promotions And Keep Gmail Calm
Deleting everything is one move. If you want fewer promo emails long-term, pair deletion with one or two habits that cut the inflow.
TABLE 1 (after ~40% of article)
Options For Cleaning Promotions
| Method | When It Fits | What Happens |
|---|---|---|
| Delete everything in Promotions (desktop select-all) | You want a full reset right now | Messages move to Trash; you can recover them for a limited window |
Search category:promotions then delete |
Promotions is huge or slow to load | Same result as deleting from the tab, but faster to target |
Delete by age (older_than:) |
You want to keep recent receipts or order emails | Clears older promo mail first, leaving newer messages untouched |
Delete by sender (from:) |
One brand floods your inbox | Removes one stream without touching other senders |
| Unsubscribe from repeat senders | You keep getting the same newsletters | Reduces new promo mail over time; old mail stays unless you delete it |
| Create filters to skip the inbox | You still want promos, just not in your face | Routes messages to a label or straight to archive, depending on your rules |
| Turn off category tabs | You want one single inbox view | Stops tab sorting in the interface; messages still exist and remain searchable |
| Archive instead of delete | You want a clean inbox but hate permanent loss | Removes mail from inbox view while keeping it in All Mail for later searches |
Archive Vs Delete: Pick The Right Tool
People mix these up. Deleting moves messages to Trash. Archiving removes messages from your inbox view but keeps them in All Mail. If you want a cleaner inbox but you’re not sure you’re ready to lose older receipts, archiving can feel safer.
If your real goal is storage cleanup, deleting has more impact. Archiving keeps storage usage the same since the messages still exist. If storage is your pain point, you’ll get better results deleting large emails with attachments, big promo threads with images, and old junk that you’ll never search again.
Make The Next Cleanup Smaller
Deleting Promotions today is a reset. Keeping it under control is a rhythm. You don’t need a fancy system. Two small changes can cut the pileup.
Use Filters For Frequent Promo Senders
If a sender emails you daily and you still want their offers, don’t delete them. Filter them. Route them to a label so they don’t sit in Promotions begging for attention.
A simple pattern:
- Open one email from that sender.
- Use the “filter messages like these” option.
- Choose what you want: skip inbox, apply a label, mark as read, or combinations.
That way you can check deals when you’re in the mood, not when Gmail decides to show them.
Unsubscribe From The Worst Offenders
If you never open a sender’s emails, unsubscribing beats deleting over and over. It takes a few seconds per sender, and it cuts future clutter. Do it after you delete, not before. Your inbox will feel lighter right away, and you won’t be tempted to quit mid-cleanup.
Turn Off Categories If Tabs Bug You
Some people love tabs. Some people miss messages because they forget to click them. If you prefer a single stream, turn the category tabs off and use labels plus search instead. Gmail still gives you the same messages, just without the extra sorting layer.
TABLE 2 (after ~60% of article)
Before-You-Delete Checklist For Promotions
| Check | Why It’s Worth Doing | Fast Way To Do It |
|---|---|---|
| Scan for receipts and invoices | Some stores send proof-of-purchase through marketing systems | Search Promotions for receipt, invoice, order |
| Watch for warranty and registration emails | These can matter months later | Search Promotions for warranty, registration |
| Keep event tickets and QR codes | Tickets can land in Promotions if sent via email marketing tools | Search Promotions for ticket, QR |
| Decide on age cutoff | Deleting older promos first lowers risk | Use category:promotions older_than:1y |
| Know the Trash window | You can reverse a mistake during the recovery window | Delete, then spot-check Trash right away |
| Empty Trash only when confident | Emptying Trash removes messages for good | Wait a day or two, then clear Trash |
| Plan the long-term fix | Without filters or unsubscribes, Promotions fills again | Pick 3 frequent senders, unsubscribe or filter them |
Common Snags And Fixes
You Only See 50 Emails Selected
That’s normal. Gmail selects what’s on the page first. Look for the banner above the list that offers to select every conversation that matches your current view. Click that link, then delete.
You Don’t See The Promotions Tab
You may not be using the Default inbox layout, or category tabs may be off. Switch to Default inbox type and enable Promotions in settings. If you’d rather avoid tabs, skip the tab entirely and use search: category:promotions.
You Deleted Promotions And It Came Back
New promo mail keeps arriving. Deleting clears what exists now. To keep it cleaner, unsubscribe from a few heavy senders and set filters for the ones you still want.
You Want To Delete Promotions Only From A Time Range
Use date operators in search. Start with:
category:promotions before:2024/01/01category:promotions after:2025/01/01
Run the search, select all, delete.
A Simple Routine That Keeps Promotions Under Control
If you want Promotions to stay light, you don’t need weekly cleanup marathons. Try this low-effort routine:
- Once a month, open Promotions on desktop.
- Sort mentally by “never read” senders. Unsubscribe from a handful.
- Search
category:promotions older_than:1yand delete those messages. - Only if you feel confident, empty Trash later.
This keeps the pile from getting out of hand while still letting you keep the promo mail that you genuinely like.
References & Sources
- Google Gmail Help.“Delete messages in Gmail – Computer.”Explains bulk delete flow, Trash behavior, recovery window, and how to empty Trash.
- Google Gmail Help.“Organize your emails into categories – Computer.”Defines Gmail category tabs like Promotions and notes searching within categories using
category:.
