Mac Mail is an essential tool for many of us, yet we rarely think about how quickly things can go wrong. Despite its reliability, the reality is that our MacBooks are just machines and can fail at any time.This vulnerability is often overlooked, but it’s crucial to make Mac email backup a part of our routine to safeguard our valuable data.
Acknowledging the risk is the first step, but taking action to protect your email data is where the real solution lies. Mail Backup X is a tool that can help with that first step. It is how you can ensure your Mac Mail is backed up and secure, minimizing the risk of losing those important emails.
- Automation You’ll Love: With Mail Backup X, set your backup preferences once and let the software do the rest. Your Mac Mail is continuously and quietly backed up in the background, ensuring your data is safe without any extra effort on your part.
- Search Simplicity: It makes finding lost emails very simple and effective. The advanced search features help you look for specific emails within seconds, saving you hours of frustration.
- Privacy Focus: Mail Backup X treats your email data with the respect. Its encryption protocols will protect your Mac Mail backups, giving you the confidence that your communications remain confidential.
- Control Over Your Data: The tool lets you decide how your email backups are stored. Choose local external drives, trusted cloud providers, or use a combination for unparalleled redundancy and security.
- Smart Incremental Backups: efficiently backs up only the changes made since your last backup.
- Flexible Restore Options: Retrieve anything from a single email to entire mailboxes with a few easy clicks.
- Multiple Account Support: Manage backups for all your email accounts in one centralized location. Perfect for individuals with multiple email addresses or businesses with team mailboxes.
In this article, we will be sharing a comprehensive and detailed guide on how to back up Mac Mail using the tool in just a few simple steps.
Before we begin, make sure you have the software installed on your system. You can get it from the official website. Choose the version compatible with macOS and then follow the prompts to install the software, accepting the default installation settings for a quick setup. And when you open it, you can activate the free trial version in case you don’t have the purchased license yet.
Now that the tool is installed and ready to go, follow these steps:
- Step 1: Click ‘Setup a New Backup Profile’ option within the “Tasks” pane on the main interface. This can also be accessed through “My Backup Profiles” in the left sidebar, where you’ll find the option to create a new backup profile.
- Step 2: A wizard will guide you through the profile configuration. The first step is to select the email client you want to backup. Choose ‘Apple Mail’ from the list of supported email clients. The software will try to find your Apple Mail profiles automatically. If it fails, you can manually locate them by clicking on “Browse.”
- Step 3: If you are using macOS Mojave or later, you may also need to give “Mail Backup X” permission to access your disk data. This is because Apple Mail stores its data in a protected location. To do this, go to System Preferences > Security & Privacy > Privacy tab and grant Full Disk Access to “Mail Backup X.” Then, go back to the software and click on “Continue.”
- Step 4: The next step is to select the folders you want to back up. You will see your Apple Mail folder hierarchy on the screen. You can check or uncheck the folders as per your preference. You can also enable the option to automatically include new folders in selected parent folders. This way, you don’t have to update your backups every time you create a new folder in Apple Mail. Click on “Continue” after selecting the folders.
- The last step is to set up the profile settings. You can customize the following settings for backing up Mac Mail data in the specific way you want:
- Where to save them? You can store the Mac Mail backup files locally on your Mac’s hard drive or remotely using cloud storage services. If selecting cloud, you’ll need to provide account credentials and authorize the app’s access before proceeding.
- Secure backups with encryption: Enable encryption to protect your backup files with a password. You will need to set up a security credential for the first time you use encryption. You will also need to enter the password every time you want to restore your backup data.
- When to take the backup? Choose either automatic (incremental), manual, or recurring option. Automatic will back up your Mac Mail data whenever there is a change detected. Manual option will trigger the process only when you click on “Backup Now.” Recurring means you can set a fixed interval of time, such as daily, weekly, or monthly.
- Cleanup: Enable auto cleanup to delete older backups and free up storage space. You can set the retention period for your backups, such as 30 days, 90 days, or 1 year. The software will automatically delete the backups that are older than the retention period.
- USB Sync: Enable USB sync to copy your latest Mac Mail backups to a USB drive whenever you connect it to your computer. This will create a portable backup of your data that you can use on any other computer with “Mail Backup X” installed (if encrypted, you will also need the key to access it). Every time you insert the specified USB, the tool will automatically update the backup with the latest changes.
- After setting up the profile settings, click on “Save” to finish the configuration. Your backup profile will be created, and you can see it on the main interface. You can also view the progress, adjust the settings, view the logs, and view and manage the data by opening the profile from “My Backup Profiles.”
The online world isn’t getting any less chaotic, and unfortunately, that includes threats aimed at our data. While it’s not exactly fun to set it up, having a firm and effective backup plan for your Mac Mail takes a huge portion of stress out of the equation. Mail Backup X tries to make this process as painless as possible, offering a good balance of control and user-friendly design. It’s the kind of thing that lets you get back to focusing on what’s actually in your emails, not whether or not they’re safe.