Did you know these limits of Gmail?

You use Gmail, do you know the limitations of? For example, Gmail has restrictions on incoming mail, or when you reach the maximum number of emails, Gmail will show a stop sign and not allow any more emails to be sent in the day.

The reason for these restrictions is to ensure online safety . According to Make of Use, the receiving and sending limits are designed so that your account is safe from spam invasions and automated messages. As soon as you reach the limit, you cannot receive any more emails. All incoming messages will be returned to the sender.

Gmail restricts receiving and sending emails

Specifically, you cannot send an email to 500 recipients or send more than 500 emails a day. However, these restrictions are only temporary and you can email again in the next 24 hours.

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You cannot send an email to 500 recipients or send more than 500 emails a day.

If the email you sent to someone is returned, check the email address to see if something went wrong, or wait a few hours and resume sending.

G Suite accounts (account types like tencuaban@tencongtyban.com ) are also restricted to the number of emails a person can receive per minute, hour and day. These restrictions are more liberal, meaning that G Suite users only send 60 emails per minute, 3,600 emails per hour and 86,400 emails per day.

Gmail limited attachments

And here are some points you need to remember when attaching files in Gmail. You can send attachments up to 25MB in size with your regular Gmail account. If you have a lot of attachments, it can't be more than 25MB in size.

If the file is over 25MB, Gmail will automatically add the Google Drive link to the email, instead of sending the attachment in the email. With Google Drive, you can send a large file up to 10GB.

How with these limits?

The attachment limits have a solution. If you send multiple emails, use Google Groups.

Google Drive is Google's solution to control email attachments. In addition, you can add a password to the attachment before sending a link to someone in the email. You are not afraid that people will "silently scold" you when they hate to accept large attachments in the inbox.