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How To Automatically Save Email Attachments To Cloud Storage

Saving email attachments is a great way to back up all those images, documents, music, and whatever else you’re emailed throughout the day. But doing it manually is not a fun process, you’re likely to miss a few over time, and you’ll use up valuable storage on your computer.

What you can do instead is set up your email to automatically save attachments to an online file storage service. Most cloud storage services have loads of free space, and the methods described below can save the email attachments automatically with each new email.

There are two really great ways to automatically save email attachments to a cloud storage service. The first one we’ll look at uses the file storage service Koofr to both auto-save and store the attachments; it works from any email but your files can only be saved to Koofr’s storage service.

The other method is a bit more flexible in that you can pick a different cloud storage service, but it doesn’t work with all email providers.

Using Koofr To Auto-Save Email Attachments

All your attachments are stored in the folder you made above. Something to know about this procedure is that the emails are stored, too, not just file attachments. So it works as an email backup service too.

Unfortunately, you can’t choose to save only the attachments, so the folder could get cluttered fairly quickly.

Automatically Saving Email Attachments With Zapier

Using Zapier to automatically save email attachments doesn’t do anything to the original email. The message won’t be marked as read and the attachment and/or message won’t be deleted.

Other Email Attachment Saving Methods

Zapier and Koofr are the best ways to automatically save email attachments to a cloud storage service, but we shouldn’t overlook other, not-so-automatic methods that are built right into some email provider websites.

Another method involves cloudHQ. The way it works once you’ve got it set up is that you open the email that has the attachment you want to save, and then click a button to choose where in your cloud storage service you want it stored.

It takes a few clicks but still beats downloading the attachment and uploading it to the file storage site manually.

There are three extensions you can install to Chrome to make this work:

Here’s how this works if you’re using it in Gmail to save email attachments to Google Drive:

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