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Mac Mail Archive folder

Hello everyone, Hopefully, you are all coping well through probably the most difficult era we will see.

I have read through some threads but I still am not sure as I have not read anything clear enough.


Does the archive folder take up extra space on the Mac?


Is this folder required?


Does this folder double up on Emails?


Is it correct that whatever I do on the Mac or iPhone, relating to Emails, the opposing device will reflect the same actions?


The most difficult thing of all, I need to clean the computer out and do a total restore.

I have tried to back up Mac Email but it doesn't appear that any attachments are included in the backup?


Appreciate any advice.


Rolf



MacBook Pro 13″, macOS 11.4

Posted on Jul 26, 2021 7:40 PM

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Posted on Jul 26, 2021 8:21 PM

Archiving mail messages instead of deleting them will take up more space in your email service (iCloud, Gmail, etc.), and will take up more space on your Mac. Your Mac should automatically remove emails from its hard drive if storage space runs low, but email messages will stay in your email provider's Archive mailbox.


Additionally, you shouldn't have to back up your email if your emails are stored with your cloud provider. If you use iCloud Mail, you can restore your Mac and your emails will come back after signing back into iCloud.


If you are signed into the same account, actions on your email on your Mac should be reflected on your iPhone, iPad, and other devices.


The archive folder does not "double" emails if they are moved to the folder. If they are copied to the folder, the messages will be duplicated.

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jul 26, 2021 8:21 PM in response to rolfjoy

Archiving mail messages instead of deleting them will take up more space in your email service (iCloud, Gmail, etc.), and will take up more space on your Mac. Your Mac should automatically remove emails from its hard drive if storage space runs low, but email messages will stay in your email provider's Archive mailbox.


Additionally, you shouldn't have to back up your email if your emails are stored with your cloud provider. If you use iCloud Mail, you can restore your Mac and your emails will come back after signing back into iCloud.


If you are signed into the same account, actions on your email on your Mac should be reflected on your iPhone, iPad, and other devices.


The archive folder does not "double" emails if they are moved to the folder. If they are copied to the folder, the messages will be duplicated.

Jul 26, 2021 9:03 PM in response to rolfjoy

Hey Rolf!


Good question. Was the reason for backing up to reset your Mac because of storage issues?


Besides using Time Machine to backup, you can also select each Mailbox you want to save a copy of, and select Mailbox > Export Mailbox, to save a copy of the data:


Import or export mailboxes in Mail on Mac:

https://support.apple.com/guide/mail/import-or-export-mailboxes-mlhlp1030/mac


Of course if you’re worried about storage, this would take some, but typically not too much.


Likewise, if you have an IMAP account, (Which most email providers offer nowadays), the data should remain on the email provider’s server regardless, unless deleted by you, (Or you used your storage quota).


And also as indicated earlier,I do believe moving a message to the “Archive” folder for most devices and providers, is meant to save a hard copy of the emails, as a backup.


Likewise, can you say how you determined that the attachments are not stored in your backup?


Cheers, happy to help out if I can.

Jul 29, 2021 10:49 PM in response to rolfjoy

Hey again!


Can you, in Apple Mail, right click the Inbox, or other Mailbox, select Get Account Info, (I believe).


From there, you can choose an email address and it will show the quota for each, how much free space you have for each account, and what mailboxes are using the most.


I find it useful at times, but maybe it’s an account quota issue, if not, let me know!

Mac Mail Archive folder

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