Google has confirmed major changes to Gmail that will directly affect how users manage and protect emails from other providers, raising fresh concerns about online security as the new rules take effect in January 2026.
For many Gmail users, the most immediate impact will be the loss of Gmail as a central hub for multiple email accounts. Features such as Gmailify and POP3 fetching, which allowed users to receive and secure emails from Yahoo, Outlook, AOL and similar services inside Gmail, will no longer be available.
This means Gmail’s powerful spam filters, phishing detection tools and inbox sorting will stop working on third-party accounts. Emails sent to older or non-Gmail addresses will rely solely on the security systems of their original providers, which may be less advanced than Gmail’s protections.
Google has said users will no longer be able to apply specific Gmail features to third-party accounts. The company also confirmed that Gmail will stop checking emails from other providers through POP, and the option to “check mail from other accounts” will disappear from Gmail settings on computers.
For everyday users, this could translate into more spam and scam emails slipping through unnoticed. Older email accounts are often targeted by cybercriminals, and without Gmail acting as a filter, phishing messages and fake login alerts could become more common.
Another change users may notice is email delivery. Messages already downloaded into Gmail will remain, but new emails from external accounts will no longer arrive automatically. Important messages could be missed unless alternative arrangements are made.
To manage the transition, Google is advising users to set up direct email forwarding from third-party accounts. With forwarding enabled, emails will still land in Gmail and be scanned for threats, even though Gmail no longer manages those accounts.
However, the process requires manual action. Users must log into each old email account and adjust forwarding settings themselves. For people with several email addresses, this could take time and careful setup.
As the January 2026 deadline approaches, Gmail users are being encouraged to review how they receive emails, enable forwarding early, or consider moving fully to a Gmail address to avoid security and delivery issues once the changes come into force.
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