On a Samsung Galaxy, voicemail can be erased using either the Visual Voicemail app or by calling your carrier’s voicemail system — the right method depends on how your provider handles messages.
Voicemail clutter piles up fast. A handful of unheard messages sits in the inbox, the notification won’t clear, and the obvious delete button keeps hiding. Samsung Galaxy phones give you two clear paths to erase voicemail, but which one works depends on your carrier setup. Here is the exact way to handle both, with the one detail most people miss.
Erasing Voicemail Visually From the Phone App
The fastest method works when your carrier supports Visual Voicemail, which displays messages as a list you can play and delete without dialing in. Samsung ships this as part of the default Phone app on most Galaxy models.
Open the Phone app and tap the Voicemail tab usually located near the bottom of the screen. The list of saved messages appears. Tap the message you want to remove, then tap the Trash icon — a small trash can — next to the play button. The message disappears from the inbox immediately, though carrier-side storage may still keep a copy depending on your provider’s rules.
If the trash icon is missing, try tapping the three-dot menu and select Delete from the dropdown. Some carrier-specific versions of the app place the delete action behind that menu.
Calling In to Delete: The Carrier Menu Method
When Visual Voicemail isn’t available or you prefer the old-school route, dialing into voicemail works on every Samsung Galaxy phone. The delete key varies by carrier, so this method requires paying attention to the audio prompts.
- Open the Phone app.
- Press and hold the 1 key until the call starts dialing your voicemail number.
- Enter your voicemail password when prompted.
- Listen to the menu. Most carriers assign a number — commonly 7 or 9 — to delete a message after it plays.
- Press the delete key during or immediately after the message finishes playing.
- Hang up when done.
Samsung’s official support notes that your provider determines the exact delete key; it is not a universal setting the phone controls. After the message is deleted, the inbox clears on the carrier side, and the notification should disappear within a minute or two.
| Method | Where It Works | What To Expect |
|---|---|---|
| Visual Voicemail (Trash icon) | Samsung Phone app with carrier Visual Voicemail support | Instant removal from the app list; carrier-side storage may still hold the message |
| Carrier menu (dial-in) | Every Galaxy phone, any carrier | Remove the message from the carrier system; notification clears within minutes |
| Google Voice app | Android phones using Google Voice as their voicemail provider | Delete from Google’s cloud; messages cannot be recovered |
| Third-party visual voicemail apps | Apps like YouMail or carrier-branded visual voicemail clients | Usually a trash or swipe-to-delete gesture; check the app’s help menu |
| Clearing Phone app cache/data | Any Galaxy phone, but not an official delete method | Removes stored voicemail metadata and may reset other Phone app settings |
| Long press on the notification | Android notification shade, some carriers | Some providers let you delete from the notification itself; not universal |
| Provider website or app | Carrier-specific app stores or account portals | Rarely faster than the built-in methods; useful for bulk management |
Verizon subscribers on Samsung devices have a clear advantage: the Verizon Visual Voicemail knowledge base confirms the trash icon appears in the Phone app’s voicemail view, and tapping it deletes the message immediately.
When the Voicemail Notification Won’t Go Away
A deleted voicemail sometimes leaves its notification stuck in the status bar. The voicemail itself is gone, but the phone hasn’t refreshed the indicator. This happens most often after the dial-in method, where the carrier sends a delayed update to your device.
Wait five minutes first — most stale notifications resolve on their own. If it persists, toggle Airplane Mode on for ten seconds, then off. That forces the phone to reconnect to the carrier network and pull fresh voicemail status. If the notification still sits there, try restarting the phone once.
What About Google Voice Voicemail?
If you use Google Voice as your voicemail provider rather than your carrier’s system, the delete path is entirely different. Open the Google Voice app, tap Voicemail, touch and hold the message you want to delete, then tap the trash icon and confirm with the checkbox labeled “I understand.”
Google warns that once deleted this way, the message cannot be recovered even though it may still exist on devices you contacted.
| Voicemail System | Delete Method | Recoverable After Delete? |
|---|---|---|
| Carrier voicemail (dial-in) | Press delete key during prompts | Depends on carrier policy; some offer grace periods |
| Visual Voicemail (Phone app) | Tap Trash icon or three-dot menu | Usually not recoverable from the phone app |
| Google Voice | Touch, hold, tap Delete, confirm checkbox | No — gone permanently from Google’s servers |
The takeaway is simple: use Visual Voicemail when your carrier supports it for the quickest cleanup, fall back to the dial-in method when it doesn’t, and let Google Voice users handle deletions inside that separate app. Stuck notifications clear with a restart or a quick Airplane Mode toggle. No universal delete key exists — your carrier decides that number — so listen to the prompts and press accordingly.
References & Sources
- Samsung Australia. “How do I Delete Voicemail Messages?” Official Samsung support page confirming the Phone app long-press and carrier-specific delete prompts.
- Verizon. “Manage Visual Voicemail Messages – Samsung” Verizon’s guide confirming the trash icon delete method on Samsung devices.
- Google Help. “Archive or delete messages, calls, or voicemails” Google’s official instructions for deleting voicemail in the Google Voice app on Android.
