Create or delete mailboxes in Mail on Mac
Any email account you use in Mail has a set of standard mailboxes—Inbox, Sent, Drafts and Bin. You can create your own mailboxes to help keep your email organised. For example, you could create a Book Club mailbox, with mailboxes inside it to organise messages by author or genre, and then move messages to one of the mailboxes.
Tip: If you want to organise messages without moving them around, use Smart Mailboxes.
Create mailboxes
In the Mail app on your Mac, choose Mailbox > New Mailbox.
Click the Location pop-up menu, then choose where to create the mailbox.
On My Mac: Mailboxes you create in On My Mac are local, meaning you can access them only on the computer on which you created them.
An account: Mailboxes created on your email account’s mail server can be accessed on any computer or device where you use the account.
If you choose an existing mailbox as the location, the new mailbox is created within the existing mailbox — like a subfolder.
Type a name for the mailbox, then click OK.
In a work environment, public read-only mailboxes may be available in your email account. For example, a public folder may be used to provide information for all users of a company email system. You can’t create mailboxes within or save messages to these read-only mailboxes. To find out how to post messages to the mailbox, ask your email administrator.
To reorder the mailboxes for an email account in the Mail sidebar, drag a mailbox to a new location within the account.
Delete mailboxes
WARNING: Deleting a mailbox permanently deletes the mailbox and its contents (including other mailboxes), and can’t be undone.
In the Mail app on your Mac, select a mailbox in the Mail sidebar.
Choose Mailbox > Delete Mailbox.
If you have problems deleting a mailbox on the server for an IMAP account, contact the provider of your account.
When you delete a Smart Mailbox, the messages it displayed remain in their original locations.
If you use the Finder to delete a mailbox, the change may not appear in Mail.
Note: If you set up Time Machine to back up files on your Mac, you can use the backups to restore content that Mail downloaded (based on options set in Mail and on your Mac). See Restore items backed up with Time Machine.