Some Gmail complaints are perennial: Google won’t let me recover my account password, or a hacker has changed my two-factor authentication options. Now it seems you can add push notifications that have vanished on the iPhone to the list. I keep a close eye on both official and unofficial Google support forums, and users have been getting increasingly frustrated with Gmail push notifications not working on their iPhone 16 smartphones. Take this example, posted to the Gmail subreddit Oct. 26: “Basically, I no longer get push notifications for new emails as banners or in the notification center; I have to go into the app to check.” Vanishing email push notifications are, no doubt, an annoyance that users want to know how to fix, but for the most security-minded among us, it may not be a bad thing. Here’s what you need to know, how to fix it and why you might not want to.
The Vanishing Gmail Push Notification Problem Affecting iPhone Users
Let’s be clear, the issue of push notifications for Gmail users not working has been around for numerous incarnations of the iOS platform across multiple iPhone hardware generations. It’s not new, which is why I’ve described it as a perennial problem. Here’s one example from January, as described by a mobile technology journalist at Phone Arena: “For the last couple of days I noticed that instead of getting notifications with previews from Gmail on my iPhone, I would see a banner with the Gmail icon that said “You have a new message.” This meant in order to see who the email was from and what the subject matter was, with any preview lacking, the user would be forced to open the Gmail app every time. OK, so this definitely fits into the definition of a first world problem, but I can understand why so many people are hot under the collar about it. After all, both the iPhone and Gmail are well-known for being easy to use, it’s what attracts so many users to them in the first place.
Why Are Gmail Push Notifications Going AWOL For Some iPhone Users And How Do You Fix The Problem?
I’m sorry, but I’ve been unable to uncover a single bug or software issue behind the strange case of the vanishing Gmail push notifications. This leads me to think that it’s most likely a matter of circumstances unique to those users who have taken to the forums to complain and “differently unique” in many cases if that makes sense. If this were an actual bug with iOS it wouldn’t carry over from one major update to the next, one iteration to another, year after year. Nor would it be something that would hang around in the Gmail application which is likewise updated many times every year to fix bugs that have been uncovered.
Not knowing the why does make the how harder to recommend, but not impossible. The Phone Arena journalist I mentioned before, found that doing the following fixed the issue for them:
- Open the Gmail app.
- Tap the hamburger menu and select the settings option.
- Select email notifications, then select none and done.
- Restart your iPhone.
- Repeat the above instructions but select “all New” or “High Priority” email notifications and then done.
Other users have said that deleting and reinstalling the Gmail app has worked for them, while for some, just restarting the iPhone itself was all that was needed.
Why You Shouldn’t Have Gmail Push Notifications Enabled
This will, I feel certain, be something of a controversial opinion, but hey: don’t use detailed push notifications for email apps. Why, as someone looking in from the security and privacy side of the fence, do I say this? Reason number one is the phishing risk. We tend to use push notifications as a kind of at a glance email filter to determine what needs to be read and what can wait. Threat actors rely upon convincingly urgent email subject lines to entice the reader into clicking through and getting caught in whatever trap awaits them. If the user has already determined they need to read the email from the notification preview, they are more likely, in my never humble opinion, to trust what they find when they do. That’s the security reasoning, and it’s not just me who thinks this way. For iPhone users, I will agree, there are fewer risks than for Android ones purely because more attack campaigns are aimed at the latter. But that doesn’t mean the risk is nonexistent.
And it’s not just the security angle you need to consider; privacy comes into play for Gmail push notifications as it does for any application push notification. I’d heartily recommend reading this Wired article about how law enforcement can use push notification data in investigations. iPhone users can control how notifications are displayed from the settings menu and I would suggest not enabling them to be displayed when the screen is locked or shared.