Notification

At least 1 message in was recently identified as potentially dangerous. Deceptive emails are often used to steal personal info or break into online accounts. Learn how to help protect against deceptive messages

Check the security of your emails

To help prevent others from reading your emails, Gmail automatically encrypts the email in transit using transport-layer security (TLS). In most cases, you can check the security of your emails.

If you have a work or school account, additional encryption types may be supported. Learn about email encryption in Gmail.

Want to get more out of Google apps at work or school?  Sign up for a Google Workspace trial at no charge.

Check if your message is encrypted

Important: If you have a work or school account, you can check an email’s security when you compose a new message. This feature isn’t available to personal Gmail accounts.

A static image that highlights the lock icon in a drafted email. Check the lock icon for email encryption details.
  1. On your computer, open Gmail.
  2. At the top left, click Compose.
  3. In the "To," "Cc," or "Bcc" field, enter your recipient's email address.
  4. To the right of your recipient, hover over Message security :
    • Message security: standard encryption: The message is encrypted with TLS.
    • Message security: enhanced encryption: The message is encrypted with S/MIME.
    • Message security: no encryption: The message isn’t encrypted, or Gmail doesn’t recognize the encryption type.
  5. Optional: To change encryption settings, click Message security and then View details.

Tip: If there are multiple recipients with various encryption levels, Message security shows the lowest encryption status.

Check if a message that you receive is encrypted

A static image that shows where to check the security of a received email. In the image, a user clicks the dropdown arrow next to the recipient's name, and opens a pop-up window that shows email security details.
  1. In Gmail, open a message.
  2. At the top, next to the recipient, click Show details Drop down arrow.
  3. In the window, next to “security,” check the encryption type:
    • Standard encryption (TLS)
    • Enhanced encryption (S/MIME)
    • [Sender name] did not encrypt this message

What to do if an email isn’t encrypted

  • If you get a warning that your email isn’t encrypted, or there’s a red lock icon , the recipient may be using an email service that doesn’t support TLS or another encryption type supported by Gmail. Consider removing unencrypted addresses or deleting confidential information from the email before you send.
  • If you receive an unencrypted email that contains sensitive content, let the sender know and ask them to contact their email service provider.
  • If you use S/MIME, emails are encrypted in S/MIME whenever possible. To either sign or receive S/MIME-encrypted emails, you need to have a valid S/MIME certificate from a trusted source.

Why some emails might not be encrypted

For standard encryption to work, the email providers of both the sender and the recipient always have to use TLS.

The email doesn’t support encryption

Some email providers send messages to Gmail addresses using TLS but can't receive encrypted messages.

If you reply to these messages from Gmail, the red lock icon  may show up.

The email is encrypted, but Gmail still says it doesn’t support encryption

Even if a message is protected by encryption, you may get a warning when:

  • Encryption hasn't worked for a certain email provider in the past.
  • Gmail isn't directly sending the message. For example, if you've set up a custom domain name like [email protected] the red lock icon  might show up.

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