Not automatically you can't.
You can set up a very generic filter that should capture most of the legit mailing lists that you're subscribed to.
Create a filter with the following:
- Has the words: unsubscribe
- Apply the label: lists
This will deal with most of the mailing lists since they should all include instructions, if not a link itself, to unsubscribe.
This should also cover those instances where the mailer addresses the To: field of the email directly to you and which might be a little tricky when filtering for to:me.
I can think of two options available, neither of which are elegant:
- Add a
-to:my-team@example.com
to all the other filters that may archive the message.
- Use a variation of the above but instead of hard-coding the address, add a descriptive label.
There's no option to send an email to the inbox via a filter. Your only option is to prevent the message from being archived in the first place.
Solution #1: This one's pretty simple. So, for example, say you have the filter:
- when mail matches
to:other-team@example.com
, archive the message
You need to change it to:
- when mail matches
to:other-team@example.com -to:my-team@example.com
, archive the message
To use this negation, it may be easier to type in the "has the words" box.
Using this solution doesn't require you to maintain the filter order. The only downside is that if you have multiple email addresses that you need to keep (e.g. my-team2@example.com, my-team3@example.com, etc.), using this method you would need to add all of those to each filter. This can become hard to maintain. That's where solution #2 comes in...
Solution #2:
This one is more complicated and relies on the way Gmail processes filter rules. Basically it processes them from the top down. This means that if you modify one (which causes it to go to the bottom), you will need to remember to reorder your filters, so that it works correctly again.
You create the following filters, in this order:
- when mail matches
to:my-team@example.com
, apply the label dont-archive
.
- when mail matches
to:my-team2@example.com
, apply the label dont-archive
.
- when mail matches
to:my-team3@example.com
, apply the label dont-archive
.
- when mail matches
to:other-team@example.com -label:dont-archive
, archive the message
When creating the last filter, it will warn you about using the label. This message can be safely ignored, since you ordered the filters correctly.
Tip for solution #1:
Of course, if the email addresses are very similar, you might be able to use Gmail's limited stemming in order to use solution #1 with multiple addresses (e.g. instead of using -to:my-team@example.com
, use -to:(my @example.com)
which will also match my-team2@example.com
in this case.
Best Answer
What you want to do is search for email without labels (tags as you call them).
For this you need to search for "-label(yourlabel1 OR yourlabel2 ... OR yourlabelX OR sent)", where yourlabelX are the names of your current labels.
I created a search and saved it to my Gmail using the Quicklinks Labs item.