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ZDNET Highlights
- There’s finally a trash option in Android Messages.
- When you delete a message, it now goes to the Trash.
- This feature is available in the latest update.
admit it. You accidentally deleted an important text message and you’re desperate to get it back. Then you might have had to reach out to the sender to say, “Can you send that text again?” Or, worse, the sender isn’t in your contacts list, so you don’t even know who sent the message.
This has happened to me many times.
So, what do you do?
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Well, if you have an updated version of Android, you are in luck Google finally added a feature For your messaging app that solves this problem.
The solution comes in the form of a dustbin. That’s right, Google has added a trash option to its messaging app. Now, when you delete an SMS message, it does not disappear into the ether. Instead, those deleted texts move to the new Trash folder, where they will be automatically deleted after 30 days. Or, you can choose to restore those deleted chats.
The feature is easy to use and does not require enabling.
SMS Trash (which sounds like it should be the name of a renegade “Star Trek” ship) was added via the latest update (April 5, 2026), so make sure your phone is up to date; Otherwise, you cannot transmit those unwanted messages into space.
I’m done with trek metaphors.
Perhaps.
How the new Trash feature works
Getting rid of those “red shirt” messages (sorry, I couldn’t help myself) is easy. When you find an SMS message you want to delete, just do so as normal. I use the swiping method (swipe left) to send them to the new trash location.
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A pop-up appears, asking whether you want to move the message to the Trash or cancel the action. Tap “Move to Trash” and you’re done.
SMS messages will no longer be accidentally deleted on Android.
Jack Wallen/ZDNET
If you then tap on your profile picture (in the top right corner of the messaging app), you will now see a Trash option. Tap that entry, and you’ll find yourself in the Trash (symbolically speaking), where the deleted message is waiting.
Here’s one thing to consider: you can’t read those messages from within the Trash. You can either leave them there (will be automatically deleted after 30 days) or restore them.
To restore a message, tap to select it and then tap the clock icon directly to the left of the trash icon at the top right of the window.
Those messages will be automatically deleted after 30 days.
Jack Wallen/ZDNET
You can also select a message and manually delete it by tapping on the trash icon.
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This feature was long awaited, and I’m grateful it’s finally here. Now, I don’t have to worry about accidentally deleting a message and never seeing it again.
