If you don't have the phone number or another recovery email address, you can't access the account. The rules aren't ridiculous. It was your own responsibility to update your phone number and your Google security settings before you got rid of the phone number. You could contact whoever has the number now and see if they are willing to give you the code. Answer from Deleted User on reddit.com
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Google Support
support.google.com › accounts › answer › 7682439
How to recover your Google Account or Gmail - Google Account Help
If you have trouble, try the tips to complete account recovery steps. Reset your password when prompted. Choose a strong password that you haven't already used with this account. Learn how to create a strong password. To find your username, follow these steps. You need to know: A phone number or ...
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Google Support
support.google.com › accounts › answer › 183723
Set up recovery options - Android - Google Account Help
Tap your account name Your name again Manage your Google Account. Tap Security & sign-in. Under "How you sign into Google," tap Recovery phone. You might need to sign in. ... Add a recovery phone. Change your recovery phone: Next to your number, tap Edit .
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Google
accounts.google.com › signin › usernamerecovery
Sign in - Google Accounts
Find your email · Enter your phone number or recovery email · ‪English (United States)‬ · ‪Afrikaans‬ · ‪azərbaycan‬ · ‪bosanski‬ · ‪català‬ · ‪Čeština‬ · ‪Dansk‬ · ‪Deutsch‬
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/gmail › account recovery with only the phone number
r/GMail on Reddit: Account recovery with only the phone number
June 30, 2024 -

My mom got her phone formatted and it's the only device where her account is signed in. Unfortunately, she forgot her password and I tried to recover it, there's two authentication process where I must put the phone number first and wait for the verification code to receive on the same account she lost, it really doesn't make any sense to me about how we must use the lost email to receive the verification code to access it! Is there any way that I can do?

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YouTube
youtube.com › playlist
How to Recover Gmail Account - YouTube
Share your videos with friends, family, and the world
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Google Account
myaccount.google.com › intro › recovery › phone
Recovery phone
Set a recovery phone number and email address so we can reach you in case we detect unusual activity in your Google Account or you accidentally get locked out.
Find elsewhere
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Google Support
support.google.com › accounts › answer › 183723
Set up recovery options - Computer - Google Account Help
Go to your Google Account. On the left navigation panel, click Personal info. Under "Contact info," click Phone Set up. To add a recovery phone number, follow the steps on the screen.
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Google Account
myaccount.google.com › intro › recovery › email
Recovery email
Set a recovery email address and phone number so we can reach you in case we detect unusual activity in your Google Account or you accidentally get locked out.
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Neo
neo.space › blog › recover-gmail-account-without-phone-number
Recover Gmail Account Without Phone Number: Step-by-Step Guide
On the next page, click on “Forgot password”. Google will then ask you to enter the last password you remember associated with this Google Account. If you can remember a recent password, enter it. If you do not remember, then click on the “Try another way” link. This is a crucial step. If you can remember and provide an old password, you can quickly verify your identity. In this step, Google will now attempt to verify your identity through several methods. Since you don't have access to your phone number, you will need to choose an alternative method to recover your Gmail account without a phone number.
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Google
accounts.google.com › signin › usernamerecovery
Google Accounts
Having trouble signing in · Please provide additional information to aid in the recovery process · Request Google’s help · Google · Privacy · Terms · Account settings · ‪Afrikaans‬ · ‪azərbaycan‬ · ‪bosanski‬
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JustAnswer
justanswer.com › email › owbx4-lost-google-recovery-phone-number-forgot.html
I have lost my google recovery phone number and forgot password, and recover email also I for got. But that got hacked.
Users often lose access to recovery phone numbers and emails, complicating account recovery. If you’ve lost your recovery phone number and email, start by visiting Google’s Account Recovery page. Use alternative verification methods like answering security questions or providing the last password you remember.
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Google Support
support.google.com › googleone › answer › 15165466
Set up recovery options for your Google Account & get sign ...
Tap your account name Your name again Manage your Google Account. Tap Security & sign-in. Under "How you sign into Google," tap Recovery phone. You might need to sign in. ... Add a recovery phone. Change your recovery phone: Next to your number, tap Edit .
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Mailmeteor
mailmeteor.com › blog › recover-gmail-password-without-phone-or-email
How to recover a Gmail password without a phone number and recovery email (2025)
January 18, 2025 - You will get an email from Google with a password reset link after the 72-hour waiting period. Ensure at least one device is signed into your Gmail account. Open the email and click the “Get started” link that is included. You’ll be sent to a website where you may change your password by doing this. To change the password on your Gmail account, follow the on-screen instructions. Add a phone number and recovery email to your Google account to avoid future password recovery troubles.
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Google
blog.google › technology › safety-security › recovery-contacts-verify-google-account
Add trusted contacts for Google account recovery
October 15, 2025 - Losing access to your Google Account can be stressful — whether you’ve forgotten your password or lost the device that holds your passkey. In these moments, you may have to take extra steps to prove account ownership, such as receiving an SMS one-time code. But that can be hard if you lost your phone or haven’t updated your recovery phone number...
Top answer
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I have now seen Google Account Recovery ask for a code sent to my recovery phone, followed by a code sent to my recovery email address.


The rest of this post aims to reinforce the answer above, and describe my test methods. If you are planning for Google Account Recovery, please read the article from Google first: Avoid getting locked out of your Google Account.

Google Account Recovery is expected to vary between different cases. It uses case-by-case risk assessments. The system is not completely documented, because it is a security system, it is complex, and it will be tweaked over time.

If you are tempted to test Account Recovery yourself, please be very careful not to risk your main account, or make it harder to recover later.

  1. Account Recovery sometimes requires more than one piece of information
  2. Account Recovery sometimes allows you to use your recovery email address
  3. My personal setup

1. Account Recovery sometimes requires more than one piece of information

In some cases, Account Recovery succeeded using only a recovery phone number or a recovery email address - and no password. This happened even though 2-Step Verification was turned on. Also, I was testing using a private browsing window, to avoid being remembered as a "trusted device". This puzzled me at the time. I now believe this was due to using a "familiar location".

2-Step Verification has become more common, as it has been automatically enabled for millions of users. See the 2022 blog post, "Making you safer with 2SV".

Coincidentally, we see various anguished support requests in 2022 and 2023.

In my latest test, I used Tor Browser. Google Account Recovery saw me as coming from a different country, as confirmed by Google starting off in a different language. In this test, using my recovery phone on its own did not let me recover my account and reset my password.

I think using a "familiar location" is helpful. However, it is not as reliable as we might wish. If your internet provider changes your IP address, for example, Account Recovery will not see it as the exact same location. I have seen Google consider a sign-in as "suspicious" after changing internet provider.

2. Account Recovery sometimes allows you to use your recovery email address

In some cases, Account Recovery offers to send a verification code to your recovery email address. This includes some cases where it asks for a code sent to your recovery phone, and a code sent to your recovery email.

In other cases, it does not allow using your recovery email at all.

Here is one example of an anguished post, by someone who has a password, and their recovery email, but not their recovery phone: phone changed; have recovery email but Google doesn't give option to use it for verification

We might be less sceptical of community support experts now :-). So I note this post:

There are an almost infinity number of conditions that could trigger additional verification or account recovery and Google has a large number of responses. It's impossible to say which is more important for all possible conditions (which is why you should have both), but in general, Google relies more on a phone than an e-mail. -- /u/bkc56, moderator of /r/Gmail and unofficial "Product Expert"

This makes sense, considering that you cannot add email as an official method in the list of "second steps", under myaccount.google.com > Security > "How you sign in to Google" > "2-Step Verification". In contrast, Google positively encourage you to add a phone number as one of the options when you turn on 2-Step Verification.[*]

[*] Except if you enable Advanced Protection, you must use security keys or passkeys for 2-Step Verification. In that case you cannot use a phone number for 2-Step Verification.

If Account Recovery does not mention your recovery email address, a last resort is to check you are not logged in on any active device, and then wait up to a week for Account Recovery to notice. At least this would make sense, but I can't confirm it.

For example, if Account Recovery believes you are still logged in on a phone somewhere, it can insist you verify using a "Google Prompt".

Sometimes, it sends a verification code to the same Gmail account that you are trying to recover. I suspect this method is specifically intended for 2-step verification. If you do not have 2-step verification enabled, you might not see this.

I have also seen Account Recovery send a "Google Prompt" to a phone which was logged in to my recovery gmail address.

You can see how Google might consider it more secure to wait and see if your recently lost phone is truly dead. As opposed to immediately trusting some email inbox you provided years ago, that Google might not know anything about.

Another issue I had when testing Account Recovery, is that it refused to use a recovery email immediately after I added (and "verified") the recovery email. The new recovery email seems to start working within 24 hours. Although, I have not tried with Tor yet. I guess this is a security feature. (There is an email notification: "The recovery email for your account was changed. If you didn't change it, you should check what happened.").

I have also seen the recovery email address labelled as "verification needed" in some cases. It makes sense to fix this if you see it. However, this does not necessarily stop you using the recovery email to recover the account. See: "The recovery email address for my Google account is marked as "verification needed". What happened?"

3. My personal setup

I've been interested enough to set up a recovery email address using Outlook.com. I have access to the recovery email inbox on my devices, and my devices will warn me if it breaks.

(I added the Outlook.com email inside the Gmail Android app. To fix a "duplicate username" error in the Gmail Android app, I had to make sure that the "primary alias" of my Microsoft Account was not set to my Gmail address.)

My main reason for this is to receive copies of Google security alerts, in a second inbox where it will be harder to delete them or lock me out.

I am unlikely to rely on the recovery email for Account Recovery, because I have other backup methods prepared. But having it makes Google happier. Maybe it will be handy if Google detect a "suspicious sign-in". Or in some other case I am not aware of.

Google advise the recovery email should be one that "you use regularly" - so not someone else's email.