Gmail's spam filtering system collapsed on January 24, 2026, at around 5:00 AM Pacific Time, hitting approximately 1.8 billion users worldwide with widespread email misclassification. According to The Tech Buzz, the breakdown produced two distinct failures at once: promotional and social emails flooded Primary inboxes while spam warnings appeared on messages from trusted, familiar senders. For email marketers and growth teams, the incident exposed a fragile dependency on Gmail's AI infrastructure that most senders never think about until it breaks.
What Actually Failed
In practice, Gmail's categorization system, which normally sorts messages into Primary, Promotions, Social, and Updates tabs, essentially gave up. Promotional emails that would typically be filtered away dumped directly into Primary inboxes, while the spam detection system became overly aggressive, slapping warning labels on messages from known, trusted senders.
The AI that distinguishes a "Promotion" from a "Person" went offline. On top of that, automated security checks were bypassed to ensure mail delivery was not stopped entirely. The result was a double failure: inbox noise spiked while safety signals became unreliable at the same time.
Beyond the filtering failure, some users experienced delays in receiving email during the incident. Those delays caused problems with two-factor authentication logins, as users could not receive verification codes in time.
Google published a public incident report on February 6, 2026, explaining that Gmail's spam checks and inbox labeling briefly degraded on January 24, 2026 for about 4 hours and 53 minutes, with warning banners on some messages and inconsistent Promotions and Social labeling. The final incident report attributed the disruption to an overload in spam-checking systems triggered by a backend failure and excessive retries, and listed prevention actions including capacity improvements, retry tuning, and improved load shedding.



