You can use mail merge in Gmail to send personalized email campaigns, newsletters, and announcements to a wide audience.
Important: Mail merge replaces multi-send mode in Gmail. When composing a message, next to the "To:" line, click Use mail merge .
Learn how mail merge works
- Mail merge lets you personalize messages with merge tags, such as @firstname and @lastname. When you send a message, each recipient gets a unique copy of the email in which the merge tags are replaced with your details.
- Recipients can’t check who else you sent the message to. To easily manage conversations, you'll get the recipient’s replies in separate threads.
- If you have a large number of recipients, you can link a spreadsheet that contains their contact information. Any column in the spreadsheet can be used as a merge tag in your message. It includes custom details for each recipient to personalize your message.
Check your eligibility for mail merge
To use mail merge, sign in to an account with an eligible Google Workspace plan:
- Workspace Individual
- Business Standard
- Business Plus
- Enterprise Standard
- Enterprise Plus
- Education Standard
- Education Plus
Add recipients directly to your message
- On your computer, open Gmail.
- At the top left, click Compose.
- You can also open an existing draft.
- In the "To:" line, add recipients.
- On the right of the "To:" line, click Use mail merge .
- Turn on Mail Merge.
- In your message, enter @.
- Select a merge tag:
- @firstname
- @lastname
- @fullname
- To insert the merge tag, press Enter.
Tips:
- To ensure your message uses the correct recipient name, check their name in Google Contacts.
- To add multiple recipients, create a label in Google Contacts and group recipients. When you add the label in the "To:" line in Gmail, the grouped recipients populate automatically. Learn how to organize contacts with labels.
- If the recipient isn’t in Google Contacts, mail merge populates the first and last name based on what you enter in the "To:" line.
- For example, if you enter "Lisa Rodriguez <[email protected]>" as a recipient, Gmail uses "Lisa" as @firstname and "Rodriguez" as @lastname.
Add recipients from a spreadsheet to your message
Important: Contact information must be in the first tab of your spreadsheet and can only contain text.
- On your computer, open Gmail.
- At the top left, click Compose.
- You can also open an existing draft.
- On the right of the "To:" line, click Use mail merge .
- Turn on Mail Merge.
- Click Add from a spreadsheet.
- Select a spreadsheet.
- Click Insert.
- In the window, select the columns from your spreadsheet that have recipient info:
- First name
- Last name (optional)
- Click Finish.
- Your spreadsheet is added to the "To:" line in the message.
- In your message, enter @.
- Select a merge tag.
- Merge tags are determined by the column headers in your spreadsheet.
- To insert the merge tag, press Enter.
Tip: When you use a spreadsheet for recipient information, check the text characters used in your column headers and email addresses.
- If a column name contains special characters other than letters or numbers, you can identify the corresponding merge tag in Gmail by its position. For example, the first column would be called "@A."
- Email addresses that contain special characters are considered invalid.
Learn about default values for merge tags
If you have a recipient with missing information for a merge tag, you get an error message. For example, you get an error if you try to email "Sam <[email protected]>" and use either the @firstname or @lastname merge tag. This is because Gmail can’t be sure whether "Sam" is this person’s first name or last name.
In this situation, you can:
- Enter a default value in the error message.
- For example, for recipients who don’t have a first name, "Hi @firstname" can be "Hi friend."
- Go back to the draft and:
- Add the missing value in the "To:" line, in Google Contacts, or in the spreadsheet you linked.
- Remove any recipient with missing values from the "To:" line or the spreadsheet you linked.
Find your sent messages
To find your sent messages, open the "Sent" folder in Gmail. In the message, you find a "Sent with mail merge" banner.
Understand send limits- Standard Gmail accounts have a daily send limit of 500 outgoing messages.
- Work, school, and Workspace Individual accounts have a daily send limit of 2,000 outgoing messages.
- Add up to 1,500 recipients in the "To" line per message
- Send to a maximum of 1,500 recipients per day
- With mail merge on, you can send one message to 1,000 recipients and another message to 500 recipients.
- For example, if you send a message to 500 recipients with "[email protected]" in "Bcc," the "[email protected]" receives 500 copies of the message. This message would use up 1,000 of your daily send limit because recipients in the "Cc" or "Bcc" field also count toward your daily send limit.
- We won't discard unsubscribe data when a user account is deleted.
- Recipients can't unsubscribe from senders within their organization.
- Reply
- Forward
- Schedule send
- Confidential mode
- For example, if you send a message to 500 recipients with a 10MB attachment, you would use about 5GB of your storage.
Tip: To save storage space, upload, rather than attach, the file to Google Drive and link to it in your message. Learn how to share files from Google Drive.
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