Back in May, Google said that towards the end of this year it would start shutting down inactive accounts. If you filed that away as a “sometime” item on your to-do list, it’s time to take action: the shutdown starts next week on 1 December.
Google says the move is primarily to prevent inactive accounts from being hijacked and abused: “forgotten or unattended accounts often rely on old or re-used passwords that may have been compromised” and are less likely to have the full collection of security settings enabled.
To deal with this, Google is going to start shutting down accounts that haven’t been signed into since 2021 or earlier. That means Gmail accounts but also photos, calendars, contacts, YouTube videos and Google Drive too: any services attached to an inactive Google account will be closed.
The exception to the new rule is school or business accounts. But if you have a personal account and haven’t been using it, it’s time to take action if you don’t want to see it shut down. That’s particularly important if you don’t want your Gmail address taken by somebody else.
Google says it’ll send reminder emails to your main and recovery emails to alert you of the change and give you several months grace, but of course if you don’t use either you won’t see them.