Outlook Inbox Sweep with Copilot in 2026: Declutter, Unsubscribe, and Archive at AI Speed
Published: June 8, 2026
The average professional receives more than 120 emails a day. After a two-week holiday, that becomes a wall of 1,200 unread messages before you have had your first cup of coffee. Microsoft Outlook Copilot's Inbox Sweep capability is specifically designed for this problem. In 2026, Inbox Sweep has evolved into a comprehensive AI-powered cleanup tool that can identify, categorise, and act on hundreds of messages at once — unsubscribing from newsletters, archiving promotional emails, cleaning out notification spam, and surfacing the messages that actually need your attention. This guide covers everything you need to know to use it effectively.
What Is Inbox Sweep?
Inbox Sweep is an AI-assisted inbox management tool inside the new Outlook for Windows, Mac, and Outlook on the web. It analyses your inbox to identify patterns — senders you never reply to, newsletters you have not opened in months, promotional emails, automated notifications, and social media digests — and presents them to you in groups so you can take bulk action with a single click.
Unlike traditional filters and rules, which require you to set up conditions manually, Copilot does the categorisation automatically using a combination of sender analysis, content understanding, and your own historical reading behaviour. If you have never opened a weekly digest from a particular sender in six months, Copilot will flag it as a strong candidate for unsubscribing or archiving.
In 2026, Inbox Sweep capabilities include bulk unsubscribe from mailing lists with one click, smart folder suggestions based on message categories, scheduled Sweep sessions that run automatically on a chosen day of the week, integration with Copilot's Prioritize My Inbox feature to ensure important emails are preserved, and a Before You Delete review step that catches potentially important messages in bulk actions.
How to Access and Run an Inbox Sweep
Inbox Sweep is available in the new Outlook for Windows and Outlook on the web. Here is how to run your first sweep:
Open the new Outlook for Windows or navigate to outlook.com in your browser.
Click the Copilot icon in the left sidebar (the starburst icon) to open the Copilot pane.
In the Copilot pane, click Clean Up Inbox or type "Help me clean my inbox" and press Enter.
Copilot will analyse your inbox and present a categorised summary: newsletters, promotional emails, social notifications, automated alerts, and unread messages older than a set threshold.
Review each category. Copilot shows how many messages are in each group, with a sample list of senders. Expand any category to see the full list.
Choose your action for each group: Archive All, Delete All, Move to Folder, Unsubscribe + Delete, or Keep (to leave them untouched).
Before executing bulk deletes, Copilot runs a safety check and highlights any messages in the batch that it believes may need your attention, giving you a chance to rescue them before the action completes.
Click Confirm to execute your chosen actions. Copilot provides a summary of what was done.
The Copilot Unsubscribe Feature Explained
One of the most satisfying parts of Inbox Sweep is the one-click bulk unsubscribe. Outlook Copilot detects emails that contain an unsubscribe link and groups them together. When you choose to unsubscribe from a sender, Copilot handles the entire process: it follows the unsubscribe link in the email, completes any required confirmation steps, and also creates an Outlook rule to immediately delete any future emails from that sender that arrive before the unsubscribe is processed.
This is far more effective than manually clicking the tiny Unsubscribe link at the bottom of each email. You can unsubscribe from 20 newsletters in under two minutes instead of 20 separate manual processes.
Copilot also differentiates between legitimate newsletters and phishing or spam. It flags senders where following the unsubscribe link may not be safe and recommends using the Report Junk option instead, routing the email to Outlook's spam filter without risking interaction with a potentially malicious link.
Setting Up Scheduled Inbox Sweeps
Running a manual sweep is powerful, but automated scheduled sweeps make inbox hygiene effortless. You can configure Inbox Sweep to run automatically on a chosen schedule — for example, every Sunday evening to prepare your inbox for the week ahead.
To set up a scheduled sweep:
In the Copilot pane, open the Inbox Sweep settings.
Enable Scheduled Sweep and choose a frequency: Daily, Weekly, or Monthly.
Set your preferences for each category: which actions to take automatically vs. which to review manually.
Choose whether Copilot should send you a summary email after each automated sweep, listing what was archived and deleted.
Save your settings. Outlook will run the sweep in the background at the scheduled time, even if the app is not open.
You can also set different rules for different senders. For example, you might configure all emails from your company's internal notification system to be archived after 14 days, while social network digests are deleted immediately on arrival.
Inbox Sweep vs. Traditional Outlook Rules
Experienced Outlook users may wonder whether Inbox Sweep adds anything beyond what traditional Rules already provide. The key differences are significant:
Rules require manual setup; Sweep is AI-driven. Rules require you to identify the sender, subject pattern, or keyword before creating a condition. Sweep analyses patterns automatically and surfaces candidates for you.
Sweep works retroactively. Rules only apply to new incoming emails from the moment they are created. Sweep can act on thousands of existing messages in your inbox.
Sweep handles unsubscribing. Rules can filter or delete emails from a sender, but they do not send an unsubscribe request to stop future emails at the source.
Sweep is safer for bulk actions. The safety check before bulk deletion is something traditional rules do not offer — an accidental rule that deletes important emails is a significant risk that Sweep's review step mitigates.
The best approach in 2026 is to use Inbox Sweep for initial cleanup and ongoing maintenance, then create targeted Outlook Rules for recurring, high-confidence actions where you are confident about the outcome.
Tips for Getting the Most from Inbox Sweep
Run your first sweep on a quiet Friday afternoon. Give yourself time to review Copilot's categorisations carefully the first time. Trust builds quickly, but there is no substitute for a careful first pass.
Archive rather than delete by default. Archived messages are searchable and recoverable; deleted messages (after the retention period) are not. Archive first, delete only what you are certain about.
Use the Keep training feedback. When Copilot misidentifies an important email as a newsletter candidate, mark it Keep. Copilot learns your preferences and improves future sweep accuracy.
Combine with Focused Inbox. After a sweep, Focused Inbox works far more accurately because the noise that was confusing its classification algorithm is gone.
Protect VIP senders first. Before running your first large sweep, add your most important contacts to your Favorites or VIP list. Copilot respects these designations and will never bulk-archive or delete emails from favoured senders.
Conclusion: A Clean Inbox Is a Calm Mind
Email overload is one of the leading sources of workplace stress in 2026, and the sheer volume of incoming messages has long outpaced our ability to manage it manually. Outlook Copilot's Inbox Sweep changes the equation. What used to require a dedicated Saturday morning of inbox archaeology now takes 10 minutes of guided AI cleanup.
More importantly, the scheduled sweep feature means your inbox never gets that overwhelming again. A clean inbox is not a one-time achievement — it is a habit that Copilot maintains for you automatically.
Take action today: Open Outlook, click the Copilot icon, and ask it to help you clean your inbox. Start with newsletters and promotional emails. In 20 minutes, you will wonder why you waited this long.











