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Delete or move IMAP emails by sender, domain, or nested rules - CLI and local web UI.

Project description

IMAP Cleanup Tool logo

IMAP Cleaner

PyPI version Supported Python versions License: AGPL-3.0-or-later

Delete or move IMAP emails in bulk - by sender, by domain, or by nested rules (a query builder). Works from the command line and from a local web interface. The CLI uses only the Python standard library; the web UI is an optional extra (FastAPI).

  • Match by a target file (one sender/domain per line) or by a rule expression like sender contains amazon.com OR (subject is Invoice AND date starts 2025-01-01).
  • Fast server-side search for huge folders, or strict local matching.
  • Count how many emails a filter matches before deleting anything.
  • Move matched emails to another folder instead of deleting them, and create new folders (or labels on Gmail) right from the app.
  • Gmail mode: moves matches to Trash (the only way to truly delete on Gmail).
  • Empty a whole folder (e.g. Trash) without scanning.
  • List senders with counts and export them to CSV (with timestamp).
  • Stop button / cooperative cancellation for long runs.
  • Scheduler: save jobs and install them into the system scheduler (Windows Task Scheduler / cron) - once, hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, or every N minutes - so they run even when the app is closed, with per-job logs.

⚠️ Deleting email is destructive. Always do a --dry-run first. Without --expunge, messages are only flagged deleted (often hidden by the client but recoverable until expunged).


Table of contents


Quick start - web interface

The web interface is the easiest way to use the tool and the recommended path for most users.

Prerequisite: Python 3.10 or newer. Check with python --version (or python3 --version). If it is missing, download it from python.org/downloads - on Windows, tick "Add python.exe to PATH" in the installer. Linux/macOS usually ship Python, or install it with the system package manager (sudo apt install python3 python3-pip, brew install python, etc.).

Windows (PowerShell):

# 1. Create and activate a virtual environment (keeps the install isolated)
python -m venv .venv
.venv\Scripts\Activate.ps1

# 2. Install. The [web] extra installs BOTH the core CLI and the web UI
#    (it pulls in the base package automatically - no separate step needed).
pip install "imap-cleanup-tool[web]"

# 3. Launch. Serves http://127.0.0.1:8765 and opens the default browser.
imap-cleanup-tool-web

macOS / Linux (bash/zsh):

# 1. Create and activate a virtual environment (keeps the install isolated)
python3 -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate

# 2. Install (core CLI + web UI in one go)
pip install "imap-cleanup-tool[web]"

# 3. Launch. Serves http://127.0.0.1:8765 and opens the default browser.
imap-cleanup-tool-web

The virtual environment is recommended but optional - you can skip steps 1 and just pip install "imap-cleanup-tool[web]" globally. Either way, activate the same environment (.venv\Scripts\Activate.ps1 / source .venv/bin/activate) in every new terminal before running imap-cleanup-tool-web.

If pip is not found, use python -m pip ... (Windows) or python3 -m pip ... (macOS/Linux); on some systems the command is pip3. On Windows, if Activate.ps1 is blocked, run Set-ExecutionPolicy -Scope Process RemoteSigned first, or use .venv\Scripts\activate.bat from cmd.exe.

Then, in the browser:

  1. Connect - pick a provider preset (or type host/port), enter your username and password (for Gmail, an App Password - see Gmail notes), and click Connect. Optionally save it as a connection profile so you do not retype it next time.
  2. Pick folders - select one or more folders to scan (each shows its message count); use Select all / Deselect all as needed.
  3. Choose what to match - either paste a target list (one sender or domain per line) or build a rule visually (field ▸ operator ▸ value, with AND/OR groups). Click Count matching emails to see how many would be hit.
  4. Review, then run - dry-run is on by default, so the first run only reports. Watch the live log; use Stop to cancel. When the preview looks right, turn off dry-run (or enable Gmail: move to Trash / Expunge) and run for real.
  5. (Optional) Schedule it - in the Scheduling tab, turn the same settings into a job and install it into the system scheduler. See Scheduling.

On a server with no desktop, the GUI is still usable from a local browser via SSH port forwarding - see Remote / headless server.

⚠️ Deleting email is destructive. Keep dry-run on until the count and log look right. Without Expunge, messages are only flagged deleted (often hidden by the client but recoverable until expunged).


Install

Requires Python 3.10 or newer (python --version). See python.org/downloads if you need it.

From PyPI (recommended)

A virtual environment keeps the install isolated (optional but recommended):

python -m venv .venv
# Windows:      .venv\Scripts\activate
# macOS/Linux:  source .venv/bin/activate

Then install. The base package is the CLI only; the [web] extra installs the same base package plus the web UI in one go:

pip install imap-cleanup-tool            # core CLI only
pip install "imap-cleanup-tool[web]"     # core CLI + web UI (imap-cleanup-tool-web)

You do not need to install the base separately before [web] - the extra includes it. The CLI stays dependency-free; only the web UI pulls in FastAPI, uvicorn and cryptography (the last for encrypted connection profiles).

From source

git clone https://github.com/mrpickles007/imap-cleanup-tool.git
cd imap-cleanup-tool

python -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate        # Windows: .venv\Scripts\activate

pip install -e ".[dev,web]"      # editable install + dev tools + web UI

Running the tests

The test suite uses only the standard library (unittest) - nothing extra to install:

python -m unittest discover -s tests -v

Quick start - command line

# 1. See your folders (find the real Trash/Sent names)
imap-cleanup-tool --host imap.gmail.com --user you@gmail.com --list-folders

# 2. Preview what would be deleted (changes nothing)
imap-cleanup-tool --host imap.gmail.com --user you@gmail.com \
    --targets targets.txt --dry-run

# 3. Do it for real (Gmail: move to Trash)
imap-cleanup-tool --host imap.gmail.com --user you@gmail.com \
    --targets targets.txt --gmail-trash

Credentials are read from flags, then environment variables (IMAP_HOST, IMAP_USER, IMAP_PASSWORD, IMAP_PORT), then an interactive prompt. Prefer the prompt or env vars over --password so the secret does not land in your shell history.


Command-line usage

Option Meaning
--host, --port, --user, --password Connection (port default 993).
--timeout N Socket timeout in seconds (default 120).
--folder NAME Folder to scan; repeat for several. Default INBOX.
--targets FILE Match by a target list file.
--rule "EXPR" Match by a rule expression (see below).
--scan-mode search|full Server-side search (fast) or local match (strict).
--include-subdomains In full mode, also match subdomains.
--batch-size N Messages per IMAP request (default 500).
--list-folders Print folders and exit.
--list-senders Print unique senders with counts and exit.
--save-senders CSV With --list-senders, append to a CSV.
--empty-folder Delete ALL messages in the folder(s); no filtering.
--gmail-trash Move matches to Gmail Trash via labels.
--move Move matches to --dest-folder instead of deleting them.
--dest-folder NAME Destination folder/label for --move.
--create-folder NAME Create a folder (a label on Gmail) on the server, then exit.
--dry-run Report only; make no changes.
--expunge Permanently remove after flagging.
--yes Skip the confirmation prompt (for scripts/cron).
--verbose, -v Debug logging with per-batch progress.
--run-job NAME Run a saved scheduled job by name (used by the OS scheduler).
--profile NAME Load host/user/password from a saved, non-encrypted profile.

Examples:

# Save a sender report (timestamp, account, folder, sender, count)
imap-cleanup-tool --host HOST --user USER --list-senders --save-senders senders.csv

# Empty the Trash, fast, no scan
imap-cleanup-tool --host HOST --user USER --folder Trash --empty-folder --dry-run
imap-cleanup-tool --host HOST --user USER --folder Trash --empty-folder

# Strict local matching including subdomains
imap-cleanup-tool --host HOST --user USER --targets targets.txt \
    --scan-mode full --include-subdomains --dry-run

# Create a folder/label, then MOVE matched mail into it (instead of deleting)
imap-cleanup-tool --host HOST --user USER --create-folder "Archive/2025"
imap-cleanup-tool --host HOST --user USER --targets targets.txt \
    --move --dest-folder "Archive/2025" --dry-run

Rule expressions

In the web UI you build rules visually with the query builder (no typing). The text grammar below is what the CLI --rule flag accepts and what scheduled jobs store - the visual builder produces exactly these expressions under the hood.

Rules are an alternative to target files, evaluated server-side via IMAP SEARCH. Fields and operators:

Field Operators Maps to
sender is, contains FROM
subject is, contains SUBJECT
date is, starts, ends ON, SINCE, BEFORE

Combine conditions with AND / OR, and group with parentheses for nesting. Dates accept YYYY-MM-DD. Quote values with spaces.

imap-cleanup-tool --host HOST --user USER --dry-run \
    --rule 'sender contains amazon.com OR (subject is "Black Friday" AND date starts 2025-11-01)'

is and contains both map to IMAP substring matching on the header; IMAP has no exact-header match, so treat contains as the reliable operator and use the target-file --scan-mode full path when you need strict exactness.


Target file format

One entry per line; # starts a comment.

spam@example.com        # exact sender address
*@newsletter.com        # that domain EXACTLY - never subdomains
annoying.com            # that domain, plus subdomains if --include-subdomains
mail.annoying.com       # that specific (sub)domain

The *@domain form always matches the domain exactly; the bare domain form also matches subdomains when --include-subdomains is given. This distinction applies to local --scan-mode full; server-side search is a substring match either way.

So in full mode *@paypal.com is the same as paypal.com without --include-subdomains. The useful part is mixing them: with --include-subdomains on, *@paypal.com stays exact while bare domains expand to their subdomains - per-entry control in a single list. Example:

*@paypal.com      # exact, even with --include-subdomains
newsletter.com    # this one DOES include its subdomains

Web interface

A local web UI (FastAPI) is the tool's graphical interface. Install the extra and run:

pip install "imap-cleanup-tool[web]"
imap-cleanup-tool-web        # serves http://127.0.0.1:8765 and opens your browser

Options: --host, --port, --no-browser. It runs only on your machine (127.0.0.1) by default. The IMAP connection lives on the local server and is reused across actions, surviving a page refresh; it is dropped automatically after a period of inactivity. Your password is never stored.

Highlights:

  • Many provider presets, connect-and-load-folders (with per-folder message counts), multi-folder selection, Select all / Deselect all.
  • Connection profiles: save host / user / password to a local SQLite DB - optionally encrypted with a password - and pick one from a dropdown.
  • Match by a target list (paste or load from a file, with inline format help) or a visual nested query builder (field ▸ operator ▸ value, AND/OR groups).
  • Count matching emails before deleting; dry-run is on by default.
  • Move matches to another folder instead of deleting (an option that excludes delete / Gmail-trash / expunge), and create folders/labels on the server. The folder box distinguishes Add to scan (just lists a folder to scan, creates nothing) from Create on server (really creates a folder, a label on Gmail) - see Folders vs labels.
  • Context-aware options with tooltips (e.g. Include subdomains only in "full" scan mode; Gmail: move to Trash only for Gmail).
  • Background runs with a Stop button and a persistent, live log panel.
  • List senders with counts (export to CSV), and a Scheduling tab to create jobs and install them into the OS scheduler.

Folders vs labels, and moving

Over IMAP a "folder" and a Gmail "label" are the same thing, so creating one works everywhere: on a normal mailbox you get a folder, on Gmail you get a label.

Two different actions in the app are easy to confuse, so they are kept distinct:

  • Add to scan (the folder box) only adds a name to the list of folders you will scan. It does not create anything on the server - use it to scan a folder that was not auto-listed.
  • Create on server actually creates a new folder/label on your mailbox (via IMAP CREATE). Use it to make a destination before moving.

Moving copies the matched messages into the destination and removes them from the source. The tool uses the server's MOVE command when available, otherwise COPY + delete + expunge. On Gmail a move relabels the messages (removes the source label, adds the destination one); the message itself still lives in All Mail. Move is mutually exclusive with delete / Gmail-trash / expunge; only Empty folder overrides everything. From the CLI:

imap-cleanup-tool --host HOST --user USER --create-folder "Receipts"
imap-cleanup-tool --host HOST --user USER --targets bills.txt \
    --move --dest-folder "Receipts" --dry-run

Move jobs can be scheduled like any other job (the Scheduling tab carries the same Move setting and destination into the saved job).


Remote / headless server (SSH port forwarding)

The tool can be installed on a remote, desktop-less server (e.g. a VPS or a home server reached over SSH) and still be driven through the web GUI in a local browser. The web server binds to the server's loopback (127.0.0.1:8765) and is not exposed to the network; the browser reaches it through an encrypted SSH tunnel that maps a local port to that loopback port. This is the same "local port forwarding" mechanism used by the VS Code Remote extension and SSH clients such as Bitvise or PuTTY.

On the server (in the SSH session), start the web server without trying to open a browser it does not have:

pip install "imap-cleanup-tool[web]"
imap-cleanup-tool-web --no-browser          # listens on 127.0.0.1:8765

On the local machine, open an SSH tunnel that forwards a local port to the server's 127.0.0.1:8765:

# Forward local 8765  ->  server's localhost:8765
ssh -N -L 8765:localhost:8765 user@your-server

Then open http://localhost:8765 in your local browser. Traffic travels inside the SSH connection; nothing is published on the server's public interface.

  • VS Code Remote-SSH: open the folder on the server, run imap-cleanup-tool-web --no-browser in its terminal - VS Code auto-forwards the port and offers to open it locally. (Add it manually in the Ports panel if needed.)
  • Bitvise / PuTTY: add a Local (C2S) forwarding rule - listen interface 127.0.0.1, listen port 8765, destination host localhost, destination port 8765 - then browse to http://localhost:8765.
  • Pick a different local port if 8765 is busy, e.g. -L 9000:localhost:8765 → open http://localhost:9000. To run the server on another port, use imap-cleanup-tool-web --no-browser --port 8800 and forward to that.

Keep it on loopback. Prefer the SSH tunnel over --host 0.0.0.0 (which would expose the unauthenticated UI to the whole network). The tunnel gives you SSH's authentication and encryption for free.

Keep it running after logout. A plain SSH session stops the server when you disconnect. To leave it running, start it under tmux/screen, with nohup imap-cleanup-tool-web --no-browser &, or as a systemd service. For unattended recurring cleanups you usually want a scheduled job instead of a long-lived server - see Scheduling.


Scheduling

Jobs are stored as JSON in your user config directory (%APPDATA%\imap-cleanup-tool on Windows, ~/.config/imap-cleanup-tool elsewhere). Scheduling is handled entirely by the operating system scheduler - there is no background process to keep running.

Click Install to system scheduler to register a job directly (a schtasks task on Windows, a crontab line on Linux/macOS) so it runs even when the app is closed. Export command shows the equivalent line.

Frequency - pick one in the Scheduling tab; the form shows only the inputs that apply:

Frequency Inputs Windows Linux/macOS
Run once date + time schtasks /SC ONCE at (must be installed)
Every N minutes minutes /SC MINUTE /MO N */N * * * *
Hourly minute of hour /SC HOURLY M * * * *
Daily time /SC DAILY MM HH * * *
Weekly weekday + time /SC WEEKLY /D MM HH * * <dow>
Monthly day 1-28 + time /SC MONTHLY /D MM HH <dom> * *

The time/date pickers use your system locale; the one-time date is rendered in the system's short-date format for schtasks. One-time jobs on Linux/macOS use at: the tool records the at job number on install, so they show as installed (via atq) and can be uninstalled from the panel (via atrm), just like recurring cron jobs. A one-time job that has already fired drops back to saved (it is no longer queued).

Linux/macOS one-time jobs need at. The at/atq/atrm commands must be installed and the atd daemon must be running, otherwise the job will not fire. On many distributions at is not installed by default: sudo apt install at (Debian/Ubuntu) or sudo dnf install at (Fedora), then enable the daemon with sudo systemctl enable --now atd. (macOS ships at, but atrun is disabled by default - enable it with sudo launchctl load -w /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/com.apple.atrun.plist.) Recurring jobs use cron instead and have no such requirement.

Each job connects with a saved connection profile (chosen in the Scheduling tab), so different jobs can target different accounts. The scheduled task runs the job by name (imap-cleanup-tool --run-job NAME) via the current interpreter (so it works inside your virtualenv without relying on PATH); at run time the CLI loads host / user / password from the profile's local SQLite DB. Only non-encrypted profiles can be scheduled - a cron has no way to type the password to decrypt an encrypted one.

Logs - every scheduled run appends to a rolling log file under <config dir>/logs/<job>.log. In the Scheduling tab, click logs on any saved job to view (or download) its run history.


Gmail notes

  1. Enable 2-Step Verification, then create an App Password and use it instead of your normal password.
  2. Enable IMAP in Gmail settings.
  3. Host is imap.gmail.com. Folder names are special: [Gmail]/Trash, [Gmail]/All Mail, [Gmail]/Spam (localised, e.g. [Gmail]/Cestino).
  4. Use --gmail-trash: a plain delete in INBOX only removes the label, not the message. Target [Gmail]/All Mail to catch archived mail too.

Support

Questions, bugs, or feature ideas? Open an issue or email support@imapcleanuptool.com.


License

GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 or later (AGPL-3.0-or-later) - see LICENSE.

This is free, open-source software with a strong copyleft: you may use, study, modify, and redistribute it, but any derivative work - including software that reuses any part of this code, and modified versions offered over a network as a service - must also be released as open source under the AGPL-3.0. You cannot incorporate this code into a closed-source or proprietary product.

Contributions are welcome - see CONTRIBUTING.md.

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