For anyone still logging into an email address they made as a teenager, Google has some overdue news. Starting in April, Gmail users in the United States can change their primary email address without opening a new account or losing a single message.
The announcement came through a video posted to Google’s official YouTube channel, where a spokesperson explained that the company is making it possible to update a Google Account username from scratch in just a few steps. No data migration. No awkward forwarding setup. Just a new address attached to everything you already have.
How the Gmail address change works
The process starts in Google Account settings. From there, users navigate to the Personal Info tab, then Email, then Google Account Email. If the option is available, a Change Google Account Email prompt will appear, and from there a new unique username can be selected.
One detail worth knowing before making the switch is that the change locks in for 12 months. Users cannot update their address again within that window, though switching back to the old one is an option if the new choice does not stick.
The old address does not disappear. Google converts it into an alternate address linked to the same account, meaning incoming mail sent to the original username still lands in the same inbox. Both addresses also work as login credentials across the full Google suite, including Drive, YouTube, and Maps. Photos, existing messages, and files remain untouched.
Gmail’s rollout is gradual, not instant
Not every user will see the option right away. Google has confirmed the feature is rolling out gradually across the United States, so some accounts will gain access before others. There is no action required to receive the update. It will appear in account settings once it becomes available for a given user.
The Gmail security concerns worth considering
The feature has drawn attention from cybersecurity researchers. Jake Moore, a specialist at ESET, has noted that the ability to modify an email address marks a meaningful shift in how online identities can be managed, and not without risk. The concern centers on impersonation and phishing, where a recycled or newly claimed username could be used to deceive contacts who recognize the old address.
There is also a question of how the change interacts with spam filters. Security researchers have flagged that switching to a new address can function similarly to starting a fresh account in the eyes of some filtering systems, which may temporarily reduce the effectiveness of established spam protections while the new address builds its own reputation.
These are not reasons to avoid the feature, but they are worth factoring in before making a change. Anyone considering the update should also audit which services are linked to their current address and update login credentials accordingly.
What this means for Gmail users
For most people, this is a straightforward quality-of-life improvement that has been a long time coming. Gmail launched in 2004, and a significant portion of its user base created accounts in those early years under usernames they would never choose today. The ability to finally move on from those addresses, without abandoning two decades of email history, removes a friction point that has pushed some users toward creating parallel accounts.
Google has not announced when the rollout will be complete or whether it will expand beyond the United States.

