Like other mail providers, google honors DMARC. If a spoofed email comes from a domain where the DMARC record has p=reject, then it will never make it to the recipient's spam folder. p=quarantine or p=none will likely end up in spam.
I've seen fewer emails in my gmail spam folder lately, but have also sent ordinary transnational emails to gsuite/gmail users that ended up in their spam folders. It started recently, so they have some kinks to work out.
Like other mail providers, google honors DMARC. If a spoofed email comes from a domain where the DMARC record has p=reject, then it will never make it to the recipient's spam folder. p=quarantine or p=none will likely end up in spam.
I've seen fewer emails in my gmail spam folder lately, but have also sent ordinary transnational emails to gsuite/gmail users that ended up in their spam folders. It started recently, so they have some kinks to work out.