Gmail aliases can use plus addressing and dot variations in the local part. Learn how Gmail normalization works and what it means for signups and hygiene.
A Gmail alias commonly refers to variations of a Gmail address that still route to the same inbox. Gmail supports plus addressing (for example, name+tag@gmail.com) and ignores dots in the local part for many accounts (for example, first.last@gmail.com can behave like firstlast@gmail.com).
These behaviors are useful for filtering and organizing incoming mail, but they can create duplicates in signup systems if you treat each variation as a unique address. That’s why some tools normalize Gmail addresses by removing dots and plus-tags.
For businesses, the key is to balance user convenience with fraud prevention. Normalization can reduce duplicate accounts, but you should communicate clearly and avoid encouraging misuse.