Gmail to offer way to change your email address

In a landmark shift from its longstanding policy, Google has initiated the rollout of a feature long demanded by its global user base: the official ability to alter one’s primary @gmail.com address. This transformative update, discovered through a recent modification to Google’s account support documentation, promises to liberate users from what was previously a permanent digital identifier.

The forthcoming functionality will empower individuals to supplant their existing email address with a completely new one, all while preserving their entire digital ecosystem intact. Contrary to the ‘scorched earth’ method of account deletion, this process ensures a seamless transition. Crucially, all accumulated account data—including the complete history of emails, Drive files, and Photos—will remain accessible. Furthermore, integration with the broader Google ecosystem will be unaffected; user subscriptions, YouTube watch history, and past Google Play purchases will be seamlessly transferred to the new identity.

The initial evidence of this feature emerged not on the company’s primary English support pages, but on its Hindi-language documentation. This discovery indicates that Google may be employing a targeted, phased rollout strategy, potentially using India and other Hindi-speaking regions as initial test markets. The support page explicitly clarified that the feature is being gradually released, strongly suggesting an impending global availability for all users. This development fundamentally redefines the Gmail experience, moving away from the notion of a static, unchangeable primary ID, which users could previously only supplement with aliases.