Three steps to inbox zero.
No setup. No spreadsheets. Just clean.
Sign in with Google
Connect your Gmail securely. We only read sender metadata.
Scan your inbox
We scan your whole inbox and group every newsletter by sender.
Unsubscribe in bulk
One click sends the unsubscribe request and auto-archives future emails.
You're the customer, not the product.
Most free inbox cleaners are free because they read what's inside your emails and sell it to data brokers. We took the opposite path.
We never read your emails
We only look at sender metadata — the From address and the unsubscribe header. The content of your emails is never opened.
We never sell your data
No data brokers. No reselling your purchase history. Your inbox stays yours, full stop.
You pay, so you come first
1.99 €/month keeps the service running — so we answer to you, not to advertisers.
Frequently asked questions
Is it safe to connect my Gmail?
Yes. We request read-only access to your email metadata and use the official Google API. Your access tokens are encrypted, and you can revoke access anytime from your Google account or by disconnecting in the app.
What can SweepMyMail actually see?
Only sender metadata — the From address, the unsubscribe header, subject, labels and approximate size. We never open or store the content of your emails.
How much does it cost?
Scanning and viewing every newsletter is free, and so are your first 5 cleanups. After that, unlimited unsubscribes and bulk cleanup are 1.99 €/month. Cancel anytime.
Does unsubscribing really work?
We send a one-click unsubscribe request whenever a sender supports it. When they don't, we archive existing emails and set a rule so future ones skip your inbox — so the sender stops cluttering your mail either way.
Can I undo a deletion?
Deleted emails are moved to Gmail Trash, not erased. You can restore them from SweepMyMail or Gmail within Gmail's retention window.
Do you sell my data?
Never. We don't read your email content and we don't share or sell anything to data brokers. You pay a small subscription, so you're the customer — not the product.