How to whitelist email in Gmail (and why important messages keep going to spam)
Important emails keep ending up in your spam folder? Here’s exactly how to whitelist a sender in Gmail, step by step, on desktop and mobile.
Tassia O'Callaghan
There’s a particular kind of frustration that comes with finding an email you needed three days ago tucked away in your spam folder. Whether it was the client you thought was ghosting you, the invoice that looked overdue, or the confirmation you chased by phone, it’s the same sinking feeling when you discover it was there the whole time.
Gmail’s spam filters work well enough that most people stop thinking about them. But occasionally they catch something they shouldn’t, and when that happens with something important, it costs time at a minimum. Whitelisting a sender is the fix.
Here’s how to do it properly, what the different options actually are, and when it makes sense to cover a whole domain rather than one address. If you're managing a high volume of client or vendor correspondence, this matters more than it might seem.
What “whitelisting” means in Gmail
Gmail doesn’t use the word “whitelist” anywhere in its settings. What it has instead is a filter system that lets you permanently instruct it to never route emails from a specific address to spam. When people talk about whitelisting a sender, that’s what they mean.
You can also signal trust by adding someone to your contacts, or by marking a misfiled email as “Not spam” from the spam folder. Each approach works differently, and they’re not equally reliable. More on that below.
Method 1: Create a filter (the most reliable option)
Filters apply automatically to every future email from that sender, are easy to edit or delete later, and can be set up for either a single address or an entire domain. This is the approach worth taking for anyone you rely on regularly.
Note: You’ll need a desktop browser, as the Gmail mobile app doesn’t give access to filters.
Here’s how to set it up:
Open Gmail and click the gear icon in the top right corner. Select “See all settings.”
Go to the “Filters and Blocked Addresses” tab.
Click “Create a new filter.”
In the “From” field, enter the email address you want to whitelist. To cover everyone from a particular company, enter just the domain (like @company.com), and Gmail will apply the filter to every email from that domain.
Click “Create filter.”
Check “Never send it to Spam.” If you also want these emails to surface prominently rather than just avoid the spam folder, check “Always mark it as important” too.
Click “Create filter” to save.
Gmail will now route emails from that address straight to your inbox. To whitelist several addresses that aren’t on the same domain, enter them all in the “From” field separated by OR, for example: sender1@company.com OR sender2@other.com.
Method 2: Add the sender to your contacts
Adding someone to Google Contacts signals that you know and trust this person. It’s not as definitive as a filter. If Gmail’s detection is particularly confident about a sender being spam, a contacts entry alone may not override it. But it’s a reasonable starting point for addresses you exchange email with occasionally rather than regularly.
To set up a new contact:
Open Google Contacts.
Click “Create contact.”
Add the name and email address.
Click save.
Method 3: Mark an email as “Not spam”
If an email has already landed in spam, open it and click “Report not spam” at the top.
On mobile, tap the three dots in the upper right corner of the email and select “Not spam.”
Either way, the email moves to your inbox, and Gmail’s algorithm registers that this sender is legitimate.
This trains the filter gradually, but it’s reactive by nature. For anyone important, a filter is worth the extra two minutes upfront.
Why Gmail sends legitimate emails to spam
Gmail’s filtering has become significantly more sophisticated in recent years. In 2023, Google rolled out a new AI detection system that increased spam catch rates by 38%.
Overall, more filtering means more edge cases, and occasionally a legitimate email ends up on the wrong side of it.
Newsletters and automated alerts are particularly vulnerable because they share structural characteristics with bulk spam: heavy formatting, multiple links, and messages sent from shared IP addresses. A sender’s domain reputation can also be a factor. If they share infrastructure with lower-quality senders, Gmail may treat their messages with more suspicion than they deserve.
The practical consequence is that an email from a client or vendor can sit in a folder you check once a week, with nothing to indicate it arrived.
When to whitelist a domain instead of a single address
If several people at the same company email you, filtering one address leaves the rest still exposed. Whitelisting the domain (@theircompany.com) means anyone from that organization reaches your inbox automatically, regardless of who specifically sends the message.
It’s worth being careful here: don’t whitelist domains you don’t fully trust. A broad domain filter can allow phishing emails with convincing-looking addresses. Stick to organizations you have an ongoing, genuine relationship with.
A note on Gmail’s “Promotions” tab
Whitelisting handles the spam folder specifically. It doesn’t automatically redirect emails from Gmail’s Promotions or Updates tabs into your primary inbox.
If a sender keeps landing in the wrong tab, drag one of their emails into Primary and confirm when Gmail asks whether to apply that change going forward. Gmail will update its categorization for that sender from that point on.
Getting whitelisting right means fewer gaps in your Gmail inbox
Whitelisting is a manual fix for a specific problem. You notice something went missing, trace it back to spam, and build a filter. For one or two senders, that’s perfectly manageable.
However, it gets harder when email volume is high enough that things slip through without you noticing. A study published in Frontiers in Psychology found that high email load functions as a distinct stressor, separate from general workload pressure, and is linked to reduced well-being among workers across a range of industries. And according to the 2026 Fyxer Admin Burden Index, the average worker spends 4.3 hours managing email alone. That time compounds when important messages are being misrouted without anyone noticing.
Keeping your inbox organized enough that you’d actually notice if something went missing is a bigger part of managing email effectively than it might seem. That's where Fyxer helps. It works inside Gmail to keep your inbox organized automatically, so misfiled emails are easier to catch before they cost you anything. It won’t replace whitelisting the occasional sender, but a more organized inbox makes misfiled emails easier to spot in the first place.
Whitelisting emails in Gmail FAQs
Does adding someone to Gmail contacts stop their emails going to spam?
It signals trust to Gmail but isn't guaranteed. If Gmail's detection is confident a sender is spam, a contacts entry may not override it. Creating a filter under Settings > Filters and Blocked Addresses is the more reliable option.
Can I whitelist a whole domain in Gmail, not just one address?
Yes. In the filter's "From" field, enter @domain.com rather than a specific address. Gmail will apply the filter to every email from that domain going forward.
Does whitelisting a sender also move them out of the Promotions tab?
No. Filters prevent emails going to spam, but tab sorting is separate. To move a sender to your Primary tab, drag one of their emails there and confirm when Gmail prompts you to apply it to future messages.
Will whitelisting work on Gmail mobile?
You can mark emails as "Not spam" on mobile, but you can't create or manage filters from the Gmail app. Filters need to be set up on desktop via Gmail settings.