Gmail vs. Yahoo Mail
by Richardson ~ January 20th, 2008. Filed under: Science & Technology.Probably most email users today have multiple email accounts, the need to check email at different locations, and have tried various web email solutions like Yahoo Mail, Gmail, Hotmail, etc. (there are others most of us haven’t heard of).
But the big two are Yahoo Mail and Gmail. Long time provider Yahoo Mail (not sure when it was launched, but I got my account in late 1998) currently has about three times as many users as Gmail, which came about in April 2004. Yahoo Mail has in the past few months added (or re-added) many features that originally drew users to Gmail, so most comparisons of the two are outdated.
I’ve been using the new Gmail and the new Yahoo Mail, both of which are based on Ajax and have fairly simple interfaces. Both have pros and cons:
Sending from other accounts: Since I have a few email addresses from my own domains, and often take extended business trips, the most important feature I’m interested is being able to “send as” those other accounts. Both let you do this (e.g., send from username@dprkstudies.org, etc.). You can use a pull-down menu to select which account to send from, including the @gmail or @yahoo account. However, Gmail has a fatal flaw in this area; some versions of MS Outlook will display:
From: username@gmail.com [mailto:username@gmail.com] On
Behalf Of username@your_domain
This reveals your Gmail address to those you send to, something I’d prefer not occur, and Gmail does not seem to be interested in fixing it. Yahoo Mail does not do this; if you “send as” that is exactly how the mail will be delivered. After I discovered this, I found myself manually switching from Gmail to Yahoo Mail to reply to some emails in order to protect my Gmail username. For me this was the last straw in giving up Gmail for Yahoo Mail.
Receiving from other accounts: Both can receive email from other POP accounts, and of course both can receive mail forwarded from other accounts, so a draw in this area.
Storage: Yahoo Mail now offers unlimited storage, while Gmail has a limit that is in the several gigabyte range and growing, making Yahoo the winner but not by much.
Organization: Gmail uses threaded messages and “labels,” while Yahoo Mail uses the more traditional folders for organizing messages. I prefer folders and dislike the long threaded message structure, which is another point for Yahoo.
Speed: Gmail loads faster than Yahoo Mail, which can be sluggish at times. Hopefully Yahoo will resolve this issue.
Spam: The Gmail filter is clearly better than the Yahoo Mail filter. But since I still have to check the spam folders for both to ensure that legitimate emails weren’t marked as spam, and since both do still allow some spam into the inbox, it’s not an issue for me.
POP, IMAP, and Forwarding: Both Yahoo Mail and Gmail allow POP access and forwarding (though Yahoo Mail only recently re-allowed that after a few years of not doing so), but only Gmail offers IMAP access. Forwarding is the important feature for me as I forward mail from the non-primary web based account to either my primary web account or my regular POP mail. For those that need IMAP, Gmail is the winner, otherwise a draw.
Other features: There is little significant difference between composing messages, filters, or the calendar and contact features to worry about, and I don’t use chat, so these are all non-issues for me.
There are probably lots of other usability concerns and features that will make one other the other your preferred choice. To sum things up:
Yahoo Mail Pros:
- Can “send as” w/o revealing the Yahoo username
- Organizes messages with traditional folders
- Closest to a desktop email client
- POP and forwarding
- Unlimited storage
- Appearance more customizable
Yahoo Mail Cons:
- The new interface is sometimes slow
- Less than stellar spam protection
- No IMAP
- Appearance can be cluttered with ads*
Gmail Pros:
- Can “send as” from other accounts (see cons)
- Simple, fast interface
- Excellent spam protection
- POP, IMAP, and forwarding
- Storage in the GB range
- Google search from the email client, access to other Google apps
Gmail Cons:
- Username revealed when sent to some versions of MS Outlook
- Threaded message and “labels” structure not for everyone
*Yahoo Mail also offers a “Plus” version for $20/year that removes all ads and offers a few other perks. For a less cluttered interface, this was worth it for me.


January 20th, 2008 at 7:52 pm
What about the original, hotmail?
January 20th, 2008 at 8:05 pm
Didn’t that go out with covered wagons?
January 20th, 2008 at 9:41 pm
It changed to Windows Live Mail, and it rocks.
January 21st, 2008 at 8:57 am
Yeah, but the address is still “hotmail.”
January 22nd, 2008 at 6:09 pm
Semantics.
January 28th, 2008 at 4:45 am
A major requirement that I have is the ability to save the contents of email messages directly to my PC. This is important to me because I work in a place that has no Internet access; so I need an easy way of downloading and storing my emails for transport to my work place.
With Gmail, it can be done, albeit with a 2-step process:
1. Select ‘Print all’
2. When the print window appears, select ‘File’, then ‘Save as’ a file to the location of your choosing in your PC or portable drive.
With Yahoo, there seems to be no comparable capability … but then I might be missing something.
January 29th, 2008 at 7:01 am
Michael,
For what you want to do, I would probably install the Mozilla Thunderbird email client (free, relatively small) on a thumb drive or other portable drive, and simply use POP to automatically pull your webmail to that drive. Both Gmail and Yahoo Mail have POP access. That would bring all your mail to one spot and allow you to draft responses to send when you reattached the drive to a machine with net access.
I have to say, however, if it weren’t for Gmail’s sending “on behalf of” issue, I’d use that service as Yahoo’s spam filter isn’t smart.
January 29th, 2008 at 7:56 pm
The last time I looked into such things, Yahoo! was charging $20.00/year for POP access, whereas Google, I think, offered it for “free.” Does anyone know if this is still the case?
January 29th, 2008 at 8:57 pm
I think it’s been several months (or maybe even more than a year), but yes, POP is now free with Yahoo. My wife has a free Yahoo account and is able to use POP (but does not). I opted for the “Plus” account to get rid of the annoying ads, but had the option for POP before that as well.
May 4th, 2008 at 2:48 am
Gmail and Yahoo aren’t really the big two. Actually, AOL and Hotmail are larger than Gmail and in fact Gmail is quite small in terms of user base when compared to these other three free email services.
May 4th, 2008 at 4:14 am
Looks like;
1) Yahoo Mail
2) Live Mail
3) Gmail
4) AOL
http://www.hitwise.com/datacenter/rankings.php
http://getthenut.com/2008/03/20/web-mail-services-global-market-share/
August 19th, 2008 at 9:45 am
The whole “on behalf of” that gmail has is a killer…why don’t they fix that!?!
August 20th, 2008 at 9:25 am
TD,
Yes, that was and still is the major flaw with Gmail, IMO.
November 30th, 2008 at 6:00 am
@dl
The popularity of mail services really depends on the region. Yahoo is very common here, Gmail is common, Hotmail is getting increasingly rare, and AOL is completely unknown.
December 22nd, 2008 at 6:56 pm
I have been perfectly happy with my Hotmail/MS Outlook combo… until now.
My wife and I switched to iPhone 3G and found that we need either Gmail or Yahoo Mail to have a smooth e-mailing experience.
So I read this entry with much interest.
I hate the “thread” structure, so I guess I’ll be going with Yahoo Mail.
Of course, if I’m going to pay $20 per year, Hotmail/Live Hotmail also offers, I think, POP with its “Plus” option.