How to Disable and Deactivate Spam Filter Protection in Gmail or Google Mail
Gmail or Google Mail as known in UK and Germany comes with a very good spam filter which scans all incoming emails and move the mail messages that are identified as spam to Spam folder (label as Spam). All spam-tagged email messages in the Spam folder are then automatically deleted, pruned and purged from the mailbox after 30 days.
However, Gmail spam filter is not perfect, and there can be false positive where legitimate emails been marked as spam or bulk and move to Spam folder by mistake. When user is using Gmail web interface (webmail), this behavior perfectly OK as user can always go to Spam folder to examine and verify emails that have been automatically labeled as spam and reside in Spam folder. If a non-spam email is found, user can click on “Not Spam” button and the mail will automatically move back to Inbox.
However, for user who downloads email from Gmail or Google Mail server via free POP3 or IMAP access with desktop email client such as Microsoft Outlook and Mozilla Thunderbird will face an issue. Typically, email in Spam folder will not be downloaded when email client accesses and downloads received emails via POP3 or IMAP protocol. If the user doesn’t log in to Gmail account via web interface to check on the Spam folder at least once every 30 days, he or she will risk losing valid email that been mislabeled and mistook as spam.
Gmail never moves emails that come from senders whose email address is listed in the Gmail contact list. However, adding contact to Gmail still require user to log on to Gmail webmail interface. And user probably have to add in lots of email addresses for friends, families, colleagues, buddies and busiess contacts that keep increasing everyday in order not to miss a single mail from them that been dumped to Spam folder.
The best workaround for users who don’t use the Gmail or Google Mail webmail interface and just use desktop email client to download incoming mail through POP3 or IMAP is to disable or deactive spam filter function in Gmail. Unfortunately, Gmail does not allow users to switch off the spam filter, and to disable the spam filter, a workaround has to be used.
The trick is to use Gmail’s filter feature. Gmail supports filter to apply certain action on rules-matching incoming mail, and the filter can be created in order to force all email received to skip been sent to Spam folder and remain in Inbox (which is downloadable via POP3 or IMAP). To create a filter to disable or deactivate spam filter in Gmai, click on Create a filter link beside the search box (or go to Settings -> Filters -> Create a new filter).
In the Has the words: text box, enter one of the following terms:
is:spam or in:spam or label:spam

Click on Next Step button, and click on OK button when a dialog pops up to warn against using in:, is: or label: criteria in filter.

Check and tick the checkbox for Never send it to Spam as the filter’s action. Click on Create Filter to disable and deactivate Gmail spam filter with immediate effect.

Although from now on no spam messages will be sent to Spam folder anymore (everything stays in Inbox), Gmail is still smart enough to warn users that an email is identified as spam, but stays in Inbox and not send to Spam folder due to the filter created.

Related Articles
- How to Hide or Remove Gmail Spam Counter
- List of Hidden Gmail Pre-Definied Labels
- Free Gmail Account Sign Up for Everyone without Invite
- Gmail Access Methods and Login Link URLs
- How to Blacklist or Block Email Addresses or Senders or Domain in Gmail
- Host Your Domain Email with Google on Gmail Technology
- How to Delete Emails from Gmail IMAP Access Mail Client
- How to Forward Messages to Your Gmail Account
- Read Your Gmail via Your Mobile Phone
- How to Disable, Uninstall or Remove User Scripts (Greasemonkey JavaScript) Extensions in Google Chrome










































January 22nd, 2010 04:33
How in the world to you turn this off? I set up this filter, everything went directly to my inbox. So I deleted this filter and everything STILL goes to my inbox. It seems like any spam filtering is now disabled and no way to go back.
January 16th, 2010 17:39
Thank you it works. If only Gmail has the filter by mailed server, that would be best for my case.
January 9th, 2010 06:58
How to you undo this? I tried to delete this filter that I just created in my gmail account, and my Gmail still just allows everything into my inbox.
December 30th, 2009 02:34
I had yo switch to basic view to have the never send to spam option available to me.
December 26th, 2009 06:34
and for explanation >> after this steps it started to work. With in:spam or is:spam or every parameter together it doesn’t work.
Sorry for my English
December 26th, 2009 06:30
I used more simple way:
GO TO: Settings/Filters >>
FILL: To: gmail, Has the words: gmail
Next Step >> and Tisk off
Mark as read
Never send it to spam
Then tick off Also apply filter to “$count_of_mail” conversations below.
Then: Update filter
November 26th, 2009 20:52
I recently got a super-important e-mail from my bank but Google filtered it out because they thought it was spam. Since I use POP, I had no idea they had done this and almost lost the mail. I consider this to be a massive problem with Google’s e-mail service but your tip has fixed it nicely. Many thanks for sharing this.
October 29th, 2009 08:48
Very great job! This was quite annoying and this simple fix seems to work! Thanks again!
October 15th, 2009 09:40
gmail says:
“Warning: Filter searches containing “label:”, “in:”, or “is:” criteria are not recommended, as these criteria will never match incoming mail.
”
what to do?
August 26th, 2009 03:36
hey thank you so much for this tip
i’m really happy too.
August 1st, 2009 23:53
Why not just set a filter with the From criteria being *@* and tell it never to send it to spam? That way you avoid the whole “is:spam” criteria that gmail doesn’t seem to like. That’s what I did and I “think” it’s working. Anyone know of a reason why it wouldn’t?
May 19th, 2009 08:44
[...] What is the solution to this? Turn off/disable/remove the spam filter. You must do this from your web-browser interface. GMail, however, provides no such option to completely disable the spam filter. But there is a workaround that I found (see here) [...]
April 17th, 2009 06:45
thanks so much for this. I was forwarding mails and gmail was marking some client mails as spam. your method worked perfectly.
March 16th, 2009 03:50
Great!
I have been added to a pr0n spam list, and this has fixed everything. The spam I get all have google group links in them, so I would filter all of them by making a filter with “is:spam http://groups.google.com/group/” in it.
Thanks!
January 22nd, 2009 14:24
that doesn’t disable anything.. you’re POORLY training the engine for your account
January 12th, 2009 02:34
thank you for this information. very helpful as user of thunderbird and spamcop/knujon
November 24th, 2008 21:43
I always love spam to never be there on mails, but for that I couldn’t find unique solution to it. Now its done and I am happy, thanks to getting known to me