If you send an email and realize later that you made a mistake, there’s not much you can do to undo the message. In most cases, the email has already been sent and there’s no way to get it back. ..


You can’t normally “undo” an email sent by mistake. Some email clients have undo-like features, such as the “Recall” feature in Microsoft Outlook, but these won’t work most of the time.

When sending emails, don’t click the Send button until you’re absolutely sure you want to send the email. Whether it’s a message you wish you hadn’t sent or just an embarrassing typo, you can’t usually take it back.

A Sent Email is Out of Your Control

An email isn’t like a comment on a website, which you can delete or edit after-the-fact because it’s stored in a single place that allows editing — on that website. When you send an email, your email client sends a copy of the email message to everyone you email. Their email server receives it and shows it in their email client.

There’s no way to go back and undo an email that’s already sent out. The copy is on someone else’s mail server, completely out of your control.

Microsoft Outlook does contain a “Recall” feature that allows you to recall email messages in certain cases. Other email clients — including Gmail with its “Undo Send” labs feature — also allow you to “undo” an email you’ve already sent, but this feature is just sleight-of-hand.

How Outlook’s Recall Feature Works

Microsoft Outlook only allows you to recall or retract messages in limited circumstances. You must be using a Microsoft Exchange email system, and you must be on the same Exchange server as the recipient. This feature may work when you’re emailing your coworkers, but you can’t use it when you’re emailing someone with a home email account or sending emails to addresses outside of your organization.

Outlook’s recall feature works by sending a message to the other person’s inbox. The message asks their email client to please delete the email you just sent. By default, Outlook will delete the email message if they haven’t read it yet. However, it’s possible for a user to disable this feature so Outlook will ignore these requests. The Recall feature is just a way of asking nicely if their email client would do you the favor of deleting an email message you already sent.

If the person has already read your message, your message will not be erased but the recipient will be informed that you want to delete the message. If you send a particularly embarrassing email, both the email and the follow-up request to delete it may be visible in a person’s inbox. If your original email contained an amusing typo or error, the follow-up request to delete it may make the situation all the more amusing.

While this feature can be useful to delete messages with typos or other errors and send along an updated copy, reducing the clutter in your coworkers’ inboxes, you can’t count on it to retract emails you wish you never sent.

Time Delays Can Give You an “Undo” Button

Some mail clients can give you the ability to press “undo” after sending an email — perhaps you’ve just noticed a typo or another embarrassing mistake, or perhaps you sent the email in a moment of passion and you’re now regretting the language you chose.

This works not by actually retracting a sent email, but by adding a delay before your email client actually sends the message out.

For example, if you’re a Gmail user, you can open Gmail’s settings, click Labs, and enable the “Undo Send” lab feature. It will give you a few seconds after you send an email, allowing you to click Undo to stop the email from being sent. Gmail is just waiting a few extra seconds after you click the Send button, giving you some time to change your mind.

Other email clients may have features that can work in a similar way. For example, you can uncheck the “Send Immediately When Connected” option in the Advanced section on Outlook’s Options screen. This may give you a few minutes to “undo” the message by cancelling the outgoing send operation before the next timed send/receive operation, when the message will be sent out.

Outlook and Gmail may have features that try to give you additional peace of mind, but don’t be deceived. They don’t work perfectly — even in the case of Gmail, if you’re a second late, that email will be gone and you can’t take it back. When sending email, pause before clicking the Send button and be sure you’re ready for that email to go out.