Inbox peace is a rare thing. MailWasher Pro gives it back, not by playing whack-a-mole after the spam lands, but by letting you screen messages before your mail app downloads them. You glance at the previews, nuke the junk, allow the legit senders, and only then do you open Outlook or Thunderbird. The latest version keeps that tidy ritual intact, with modern IMAP/POP handling, live learning, and a curated threat feed that helps catch phish before they waste your day.
Exploring adjacent workflow tools? Browse ourOffice & Productivityshelf for mail clients and helpers that pair well with MailWasher.
Key Features
Preview first, download later — check senders, subjects, and small snippets safely on the server; delete/keep at the gate so your actual inbox stays clean. Works with your existing client (Outlook, Thunderbird, etc.).
Trainable junk control — combine your personal allow/deny rules with MailWasher’s learning engine so it gets sharper as you mark spam/ham.
FirstAlert™ cloud intelligence — MailWasher taps a shared spam-signature database (fed by traps and user reports) to block live campaigns and phishing waves faster.
Multiple accounts, POP3/IMAP — point it at one mailbox or many; it plays nice with common providers and keeps your routine intact.
Sane defaults, simple rollbacks — keep a friendly Friends list/Blacklist, preview HTML safely, and undo accidental deletes from the Recycle Bin before you fetch mail with your client.
Low-friction deployment — a standalone offline installer and 30-day full trial make it easy to pin a team-wide full version and keep installer checksums alongside your rollout notes. (Soft LSI phrasing only, not in anchors.)
What’s New
7.15.42 (July 2025) — stability fixes around the installer and HTML rendering; part of a quick sequence of midsummer polish releases.
7.15.37–7.15.38 — crash fix tied to the FirstAlert feed and additional installer corrections. If you skipped a few updates, this line is where things settle again.
7.15.20 (Feb 2025) — Gmail app-password guidance, sync fixes, and better handling for some Microsoft accounts—useful if you manage mixed mailboxes.