
Wondering why am I not receiving emails? Learn the common causes and step-by-step fixes for Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, Apple Mail, and more on desktop and mobile.
If you’re reading this, there’s a good chance you’re missing important messages in your inbox and it’s starting to cause problems. Personal conversations, work updates, or critical account notifications, not receiving emails can disrupt your day and even lead to missed opportunities. The issue could be as simple as an overfilled inbox or as complex as incorrect server settings.
In this guide, we’ll walk you through the most common reasons why emails fail to arrive, with specific steps for popular providers like Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, and Apple Mail. We’ll also cover troubleshooting on desktop, webmail, and mobile devices, so you can pinpoint and fix the issue no matter how you check your messages.
TL;DR
Check your internet connection and make sure your email storage isn’t full.
Review spam/junk folders, filters, and blocked senders to uncover hidden rules.
Confirm sync is enabled on mobile apps and account settings are correct.
Clear browser cache or disable extensions if webmail isn’t updating.
If the issue persists, contact your provider’s support (Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, Apple Mail).
Why Am I Not Receiving Emails?
An email passes through multiple checkpoints, from the sender’s device to their server, over to your provider’s server, and finally into your inbox. If a step fails, the message might be delayed, rerouted, or blocked.
In the next sections, we’ll start with quick, low-effort checks you can run immediately, then move into deeper troubleshooting to uncover and fix less obvious issues.
1. Check Your Internet Connection
Before diving into more complex fixes, start with the basics: if your device isn’t connected to the internet, no email app or webmail service can update. Even a weak or unstable connection can stop new messages from showing up.
On a desktop or a laptop
Try loading a few different websites in your browser. If they’re slow or won’t load, the connection is likely the problem.
If you’re using webmail (like Gmail.com or Outlook.com), switch to another browser or refresh the page to see if new emails appear.
On mobile devices
Swipe down in your email app to refresh your inbox.
Switch between Wi-Fi and mobile data to determine which connection works better.
If you’re traveling or in a low-signal area, turn Airplane Mode on and off to reset the connection.
If your internet connection is the issue, try restarting your modem and router by unplugging them, waiting 30 seconds, and plugging them back in. This often clears temporary network errors and restores stable service.
A quick connection refresh often gets your inbox moving again without further troubleshooting.
If you use Gmail and want step-by-step instructions tailored to it, see our in-depth guide: Why Am I Not Getting Emails? 10 Fixes That Actually Work.
2. Invalid or Mistyped Email Address
One of the most overlooked reasons for not receiving emails is a simple typo, either yours or the sender's. If the email address on file is even slightly off, messages will never reach you, and you may not get any notification that something is wrong.
Common scenarios to watch for:
The sender has an outdated version of your email address (an old employer domain, a previous ISP, etc).
Your address was entered incorrectly into a form, CRM, or contact list; a transposed letter or missing character is all it takes.
You recently changed your email provider or username and didn't update all your accounts and subscriptions.
Autocomplete on devices silently filled in the wrong address when someone composed a message.
How to fix it:
Start by confirming your correct email address is listed everywhere it matters, your email signature, contact forms, business cards, and any accounts or subscriptions you rely on.
If you manage a custom domain email (like name@yourbusiness.com), also verify with your hosting provider that the address is active and properly configured; sometimes addresses break after domain renewals or migrations without any obvious warning.
3. Storage Limits and Quotas Across Email Providers
Even if your internet is fine, a full mailbox can stop new emails from arriving. Every email service sets its own storage limits, and once you reach them, incoming messages may bounce back to the sender.
Gmail
Gmail gives you 15 GB of free storage shared across Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Photos. If this quota is full, new emails will bounce until you free up space.
Check storage: Go to one.google.com/storage for a usage breakdown across Gmail, Drive, and Photos.
Free up space:
In Gmail, search for
larger:10Morhas:attachmentto find big emails quickly.Empty Trash and Spam — they still count toward your total.
In Google Drive, delete unused files, especially videos and PDFs.
In Google Photos, remove large videos or back them up elsewhere.
Upgrade via Google One if you need more room.
Also Read: Mass Delete and Organize Emails in Gmail
Once enough space is cleared, incoming messages resume automatically.
Outlook.com / Microsoft 365
Free Outlook.com accounts include 15 GB of storage space in your mailbox. If full, you can’t send or receive email until you clear space.
Check storage:
Sign in at Outlook.com.
Go to Settings → View all Outlook settings → General → Storage.
Free up space:
Sort your inbox by size and delete the largest emails first.
Empty the Deleted Items and Junk Email folders.
Remove large attachments or save them to OneDrive before deleting.
Microsoft 365 subscribers can expand mailbox limits, so consider upgrading if storage fills often.
Also Read: How to Delete Multiple Emails on Outlook (Desktop, Web, Mobile Guide)
Yahoo Mail
Yahoo Mail free accounts now offer 20 GB of mailbox storage, a significant reduction from the long-standing 1 TB limit, effective July 29, 2025. If you were close to the old limit, this sudden drop could immediately block incoming mail.
Check storage:
Sign in to Yahoo Mail.
Click the Settings gear → More Settings → Storage.
Free up space:
Search for large emails using
larger:10Min the search bar.Delete promotional emails with attachments (often the biggest culprits).
Clear your Trash folder.
Use Yahoo’s built-in cleanup suggestions if available in your region.
Apple Mail (iCloud Mail)
iCloud Mail counts against your iCloud storage plan (5 GB free shared across Mail, Photos, Drive, and backups).
Check storage:
On Mac: Apple menu → System Settings → Apple ID → iCloud → Manage.
On iPhone/iPad: Settings → [Your Name] → iCloud → Manage Storage.
Free up space:
Delete large emails or move them to On My Mac (local storage) if using Apple Mail.
Remove unused iCloud Drive files and photos.
Empty the Recently Deleted folder in Mail.
Upgrade your iCloud storage plan if needed.
Keeping your mailbox under the limit ensures new emails arrive without delay. A quick cleanup can often solve delivery problems instantly.
4. Check Spam Filters and Junk Folders
Email providers use spam filters to block unwanted messages, but sometimes legitimate mail gets caught in the net. When this happens, the message is delivered, but to your Spam or Junk folder instead of your inbox.
How to fix the spam folder
Spam filters learn from your actions. Each time you correct them, you improve future accuracy.
Open the message in the spam folder and click Not spam (or Not junk) to move it to your inbox and help train the filter.
Add the sender to your contacts or whitelist them:
Gmail: Click the sender’s name → Add to contacts.
Outlook: Go to Settings → View all Outlook settings → Junk email → Safe senders.
Yahoo: Go to Settings → More settings → Filters and add a rule for the sender.
Apple Mail: Add the sender to your Contacts app.
Extra checks:
If you use third-party spam blockers or antivirus-integrated filters, open their dashboard to review quarantined emails. They may store blocked messages separately from your provider’s spam folder.
On mobile devices, check both the email app’s spam/junk folder and any system-level filters. Some clients may quietly move messages without matching the behavior you see in webmail.
Also Read: How to Manage Spam Emails in Gmail
5. Review Email Forwarding, Filters, and Rules
Filters and forwarding rules are powerful tools for organizing your inbox, but they can also silently redirect, archive, or delete messages if set up incorrectly. If an expected email isn’t showing up, it’s worth checking whether an old filter or forwarding setting is catching it.
Where to check:
Gmail: Settings → See all settings → Filters and Blocked Addresses / Forwarding and POP/IMAP
Outlook.com: Settings → View all Outlook settings → Mail → Rules / Forwarding
Apple Mail (iCloud): Sign in to iCloud.com → Mail → Settings (gear icon) → Rules
Yahoo Mail: Settings → More Settings → Filters / Mailboxes (forwarding settings vary by account type)
Next steps: If you find a filter or forwarding rule affecting your messages, disable it or adjust the criteria so the email is delivered to your inbox. Test by sending yourself a message to confirm it works before closing your settings.
Tip: Periodically review your filters and rules, especially if you’ve imported mail from another service or used automation tools in the past; they may still be running in the background.
6. Blocked Attachments
Sometimes an email arrives at your provider's server but never makes it to your inbox because of the file attached to it. Most email providers automatically block certain attachment types as a security measure, and when this happens, the entire message may be silently dropped or bounced back to the sender without a clear explanation.
File types commonly blocked by email providers:
Executable files like .exe, .bat, .cmd, and .msi are flagged as potential malware.
Compressed archives like .zip and .rar are often blocked when they contain executable files inside.
Script files like .js, .vbs, and .ps1.
Certain document macros are embedded in .docx or .xlsm files.
How major providers handle blocked attachments:
Gmail automatically blocks a wide range of file types and will notify the sender if their message was rejected. If you're expecting a file Gmail blocks, ask the sender to upload it to Google Drive and share the link instead.
Outlook blocks executable and script files by default.
Yahoo Mail scans all attachments for viruses and will block or quarantine messages that fail the scan.
Apple Mail / iCloud Mail relies on system-level security and may block flagged attachments depending on your macOS or iOS settings.
What to do if you're missing an email with an attachment:
Ask the sender to resend the file using a cloud sharing link (Google Drive, Dropbox, OneDrive) instead of a direct attachment.
If you're in a corporate environment, contact your IT team, which may have stricter attachment policies in place that go beyond the provider's defaults.
Check your spam or junk folder, as blocked attachment warnings sometimes land there rather than your main inbox.
If you manage your own domain email, review your hosting provider's attachment filtering rules and adjust them if needed.
7. Malware or Security Compromise
In rare cases, email delivery problems are caused by malware or a compromised account. If your device or email account has been infected, security systems may temporarily block incoming (or outgoing) mail to prevent further damage.
Malware can interfere with email in several ways, from hijacking your account to triggering automatic security lockdowns.
Signs Malware May Be Involved
You might notice:
You’re suddenly logged out of your account repeatedly
Unknown emails appear in your “Sent” folder
Contacts say they received strange messages from you
Security alerts about suspicious login activity
Your email provider temporarily suspends your account
Some providers automatically restrict mail activity if they detect unusual behavior, such as mass email sending, login attempts from unfamiliar locations, or spam-like activity.
How to Fix It
If you suspect a security issue:
Run a full antivirus and anti-malware scan on your device.
Change your email password immediately (and update it on all devices).
Enable two-factor authentication (2FA) for stronger protection.
Review your account’s recent login activity and sign out of unfamiliar sessions.
Remove any suspicious browser extensions.
8. Blacklisted IP Address or Domain
Even if everything on your end is configured correctly, emails can still fail to arrive if the sender's IP address or domain has been blacklisted. Email providers and spam monitoring organizations maintain lists of known sources of spam, phishing, and malicious content. If a sender's mail server appears on one of these lists, your provider may silently reject or drop their messages before they ever reach your inbox.
What to do:
If you're the recipient, there's little you can do directly; the fix needs to happen on the sender's side. Let them know their domain or IP may be blacklisted, so they can investigate.
If you're the sender or manage your own domain, use free tools like MXToolbox Blacklist Check or MultiRBL to check whether your IP or domain appears on any major blacklists.
Submit a delisting request through the relevant blacklist provider's website — most have a formal process and will remove a listing once the underlying issue is resolved.
Work with your hosting or email provider to switch to a dedicated IP address if you're on a shared server that keeps getting flagged.
Ensure your SPF, DKIM, and DMARC records are correctly configured, as missing or broken authentication records can contribute to blacklisting.
9. POP/IMAP Configuration Errors
If you use an email app like Outlook, Apple Mail, Thunderbird, or a built-in mobile mail app, your account connects using either POP or IMAP settings. If these settings are incorrect, your device may fail to retrieve new emails, even though messages are arriving correctly on the server.
This commonly happens after:
Changing your email password
Switching hosting providers
Migrating to a new domain
Updating your email security settings
Reconfiguring your mail app manually
POP vs. IMAP: Why It Matters
IMAP syncs emails across all devices. If configured properly, your inbox stays consistent everywhere.
POP downloads emails to one device and may remove them from the server (depending on settings).
If POP is misconfigured, emails may appear on one device but not another — giving the impression that messages are missing.
Quick Fix
Remove the account from your email app.
Re-add it using the provider’s automatic setup option (if available).
Double-check SSL and port numbers before saving.
10. Server and Delivery Issues Beyond Your Control
Sometimes, the problem isn’t on your device at all, but rather with the sender’s or your email provider’s servers. Email authentication records, such as SPF, DKIM, and DMARC, verify that messages originate from trusted sources.
If these DNS records are missing or misconfigured, mail servers may reject the email or send it to spam. Misconfigurations can cause:
Emails bouncing back to the sender
Messages silently drop before reaching your inbox
Spam filters are flagging legitimate emails
Quick test for SPF/DKIM/DMARC
Send yourself an email from the domain in question.
In Gmail, open the email → click More (⋮) → Show original.
Look for the “SPF,” “DKIM,” and “DMARC” lines. If any say FAIL, the configuration needs fixing.
For a more detailed check, use free tools like MXToolbox SPF Record Lookup or DMARC Analyzer.
What to do during outages or misconfigurations
If you manage your own domain, review SPF, DKIM, and DMARC settings in your DNS records. Correct any errors based on your email provider’s documentation.
If you use a hosted service (like Gmail, Outlook, or Yahoo), wait until the provider resolves the issue; most outages are temporary.
For urgent emails during an outage, temporarily use an alternative email account or provider.
11. Two-Step Verification Blocking Email Access
Two-step verification (also called two-factor authentication or 2FA) is one of the best ways to secure your email account, but if it's not set up correctly, it can also be the reason your emails stop coming through. This is especially common when using third-party email clients or apps that connect to your account, as they may not support the standard login flow that two-step verification requires.
What to do:
If you use a third-party email client, generate an App Password from your provider and update your email client's account settings with it, replacing your regular password.
Re-authenticate your email client or app entirely after enabling 2FA rather than assuming the existing connection will carry over.
Make sure your recovery options (backup phone number, backup codes, or secondary email) are up to date so you don't get locked out of completing the verification step.
If you've lost access to your 2FA method, use your provider's account recovery process to regain access before troubleshooting email delivery further.
12. When to Contact Support
Some email problems can be solved with simple setting checks or sync fixes, but there comes a point where self-troubleshooting isn’t enough. Knowing when to escalate saves time and helps you get a faster resolution.
Signs You Need to Escalate
You’ve confirmed your internet connection, sync settings, and storage space are fine, but the issue persists.
Your messages are bouncing back with error codes you don’t understand.
Emails are missing entirely from the server, not just your device.
Delivery delays are consistent across all devices and networks.
Other users on the same email service report the same issue (check provider status pages).
Gather the Right Information First
Support teams resolve problems more efficiently when you provide specific details. Before reaching out:
Take screenshots of any error messages or unusual inbox behavior.
Record timestamps of when the issue started.
List troubleshooting steps you’ve already tried.
Save sample emails (with full headers if possible) to show failed delivery attempts.
Where to Get Help
Gmail: Gmail Help Center | Gmail Help Community
Outlook / Microsoft 365: Microsoft Support | Microsoft 365 Service Health
Yahoo Mail: Yahoo Help
Apple Mail: Apple Mail Support | Apple System Status
Conclusion & Next Steps
Email problems don’t have to derail your day. With the right troubleshooting steps, you can solve most delivery issues quickly. But fixing problems is only half the battle.
Once your inbox is working again, take the next step: prevent missed emails, clutter, and unnecessary stress before they start.
NewMail AI is an AI-powered Gmail assistant built to keep your inbox organised, prioritised, and distraction-free. From summarizing long threads to helping you triage what matters most, it’s designed for busy professionals who need email to work for them, not against them.

Try NewMail AI for free and turn your inbox into a productivity tool instead of a problem to solve.

FAQs – Why Am I Not Receiving Emails?
1. Why am I not receiving emails in Gmail but can send them?
If you can send but not receive, check Gmail’s Filters and Blocked Addresses, make sure your inbox isn’t full, and review the Spam folder. Also, check if email forwarding is enabled to another account.
2. Why am I not receiving emails from a specific person in Outlook?
This may be due to junk email filtering or safe sender settings. Add the sender to your Safe Senders List, check blocked addresses, and review Rules to ensure their messages aren’t being moved or deleted.
3. Why are my emails not syncing on my iPhone?
Ensure Mail is enabled in Settings > Mail > Accounts for your email provider. Also verify Push/Fetch settings, check your device’s available storage, and remove/re-add the account if needed.
4. Why do some emails go straight to spam instead of my inbox?
Email providers use spam filters based on sender reputation and message content. You can mark legitimate messages as “Not Spam” to train the filter, and whitelist trusted senders.
5. Why am I not receiving emails after changing my password?
If you updated your password, you need to update it in all email apps and devices. Old credentials will cause sync errors until they’re replaced.
6. Why am I not receiving emails on my business domain?
Domain email issues can come from incorrect DNS settings (SPF, DKIM, DMARC), expired hosting, or blacklisted mail servers. Contact your domain or hosting provider to verify configurations.
