Between marketplace orders, grocery deliveries, gifts, and returns, most of us have several packages in transit at any given moment — each with its own carrier, its own tracking number, and its own email buried somewhere in the inbox. The manual way to keep track is a scavenger hunt: dig up the confirmation, copy the tracking number, paste it into the right carrier's website, repeat. The better way is to let the shipping emails you already receive do the work. Every "Your order has shipped" message contains everything needed to follow a package automatically. This guide explains how automatic delivery tracking works, how to set it up, and how to get one calm, consolidated view of what's arriving and when — so remembering becomes something you no longer have to do.

Why manual package tracking falls apart
The problem isn't any single package — it's the volume and the fragmentation. A typical week might include an Amazon box, a clothing order shipping via UPS, a grocery delivery, and a return you're waiting to see refunded. Each lives in a different email, moves through a different carrier, and updates on a different schedule.
Carrier apps only help if you remember to open them and paste the number in. Retailer accounts scatter the same information across a dozen logins. The result is a low-grade mental tax: a nagging sense that something is arriving, without a reliable place to check what and when. That remembering is exactly the kind of invisible work that adds up.
Automatic tracking removes the copying, the logging in, and the remembering. The signal you need is already sitting in your inbox the moment a retailer emails you a shipping confirmation.
- No tracking numbers to copy or paste
- No juggling separate carrier apps or retailer logins
- Nothing to remember to check manually
- One list instead of a dozen scattered emails
How automatic tracking from your inbox works
Almost every purchase generates a predictable trail of emails: an order confirmation, then a shipping notification with a carrier and tracking number, then delivery updates. Automatic tracking reads those emails and pulls out the structured details — what shipped, which carrier has it, the tracking number, and the estimated arrival window.
Yuki connects to your Gmail or Outlook and does exactly this. It recognizes order and shipping confirmations, extracts the delivery details, and assembles them into a live package list — no manual entry required. Because it's reading the same emails that already arrive, coverage spans whatever you actually order, across carriers, without you configuring anything per-retailer.
The same email-reading engine also picks up receipts, bills, and calendar-worthy events, so delivery tracking isn't a separate silo — it's one facet of turning your inbox into an organized memory of everyday life.
- Reads order and shipping confirmations from Gmail or Outlook
- Extracts carrier, tracking number, item, and expected date
- Builds one live list across every retailer and carrier
- Updates as new status emails arrive
Setting it up in a few minutes
Getting started is mostly a matter of connecting the right inbox. Install Yuki (it's free, on iOS and Android), connect the email account where your shopping and shipping emails land, and let it scan. Within a minute or two you'll see your in-transit packages gathered into a single view, each with its expected delivery window.
From there, turn on smart notifications so you're alerted when something goes out for delivery or is marked delivered — the moments that actually matter — rather than every intermediate scan of a barcode. That keeps you informed without adding noise.
Keep the whole household in the loop
Packages are rarely a solo concern. A partner wants to know if the crib arrives before the weekend; a roommate is waiting on a shared kitchen order; a co-parent needs to know a gift landed before a handoff. Forwarding shipping emails back and forth is its own chore.
With a shared group, everyone sees what's arriving without anyone forwarding anything. It's the coordination layer for a household — the same place you'd share a calendar, a grocery list, or split a bill — so 'is it here yet?' stops being a text thread and becomes something everyone can just check.
This is the broader point of tracking deliveries automatically: it's not about one clever feature, it's about offloading the remembering and the coordinating to a system that already sees the information, so the mental load doesn't land on you.
Step by step
- 1Connect the email account where your order and shipping confirmations land (Gmail or Outlook).
- 2Let the assistant scan for existing 'order confirmed' and 'has shipped' emails and extract the carrier, tracking number, and item.
- 3Review the auto-built list of in-transit packages, each with its expected delivery window.
- 4Turn on notifications so you're pinged on out-for-delivery and delivered status changes.
- 5Share a group with your household so everyone sees what's arriving without forwarding emails.
