2

I was recently introduced to the task-specific feature, a.k.a. the "+ email address trick", or the Dots don't matter in Gmail addresses features, and I learned from this post that you can set up a reply-as for these email addresses, but I'm wondering:

Can you send emails with the return address being the task-specific email address?

eg. [email protected]

Thanks!

1
  • webapps.stackexchange.com/users/87075/ricardo's answer is correct. Can you clarify if you are making a distinction between replying to an email vs sending a brand new email? If yes, the question title and body should be edited to clarify that as it is ambighuous given that you are sending emails when you reply to one.
    – Blindspots
    Commented Sep 16, 2022 at 17:17

1 Answer 1

3

Yes, you can.

The emails you send using the task-specific email will be sent as if they were your email address. The receiver will see the sender as the [email protected] account and if they reply to your email, it will be sent to that address.

The accepted answer to Gmail: Reply as task-specific email address the message was sent to (the +trick) shows you how to set it up to be a sender email. Please follow steps 1-6.


Note: an informed receiver could infer that your original email account is the left side of the + character plus the @gmail.com (e.g. [email protected]), but the email app won't (unless it was specifically developed to handle this).

3
  • 1
    I have added some additional generic info regarding 'send as' to the original answer in hopes of improving it. webapps.stackexchange.com/a/160309/87075
    – Blindspots
    Commented Sep 16, 2022 at 19:35
  • 1
    Sorry, English is not my first language, but I tried: your original email account is the prefix to the left side of the + character plus the @gmail.com . E.g. [email protected] is the task email that belongs to [email protected]; that's why I said "left"
    – Ricardo
    Commented Sep 16, 2022 at 23:16
  • No. You are correct. I don't use +addressing and assumed it was the other way around. My mistake.
    – Blindspots
    Commented Sep 17, 2022 at 2:09

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.