Top

Get your own email address on Gmail for as little as Rs 130 per month

Google is finally getting ready to help you with your own custom email address for a price

Google’s Gmail seems to be heading to a whole new level. According to GSM Arena, Gmail is soon going to offer you your own custom email address for as little as Rs 130 ($2) per month. This means, you don’t have to be stuck with an email address.

Take for example, you are running a small part-time business in the name of ‘Horizon Infosys’ and are using a Gmail address for your conversations. You may have registered it as ‘samuel.horizoninfosys@gmail.com’. So your company email address does not look professional enough for giving it out. For a tiny price each month, you can professionalize your email address with your own requirement, and still have it accessed and managed with Gmail. So now you could possibly get ‘samuel@horizoninfosys.com’. This would also help you big time with your business.

Gmail will soon be announcing its email personalization service around the corner. The new service will allow you any one to have a personalized email address for a price of just $2 per month. If you are using it for personal use, you can get a single email ID with the usual 15GB storage to save your emails. If you want to use it for work or business purposes, you can opt for the $5 package, which gives you an option for ‘name@yourcompany.com’ along with managing more email addresses for your team members and a total of 30GB online storage. Lastly, if you need unlimited storage for your business, you can opt for the $10 package. This one gives you around 1TB of online storage, per user, if the number of users is below 5. The new feature will be a good option for those who don’t own their own website or domain or a mailbox on their website. However, there are a few confused questions that some readers have thrown up. ‘Can I create my email address as ‘myname@facebook.com’?’ Well, as for now I don’t think that is possible. We may end up with a similar situation as ‘that domain name already exists’.

Next Story