Why Cold Email Deliverability Is Getting Harder
Cold email has always been a game of trust — and inbox providers are getting stricter every year. Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft have all tightened their authentication requirements. AI-powered spam filters now analyze sending patterns, content, and engagement signals in real time.
The result: a legitimate cold email that would have landed in the inbox two years ago might now go straight to spam.
This guide covers the 10 most impactful things you can do to improve your cold email deliverability in 2026.
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1. Authenticate Your Domain (SPF, DKIM, DMARC)
This is non-negotiable. Without proper email authentication, inbox providers have no reason to trust that your emails are legitimate.
SPF tells receiving servers which IPs are allowed to send email for your domain. DKIM adds a cryptographic signature that proves the message wasn't tampered with. DMARC ties them together and tells providers what to do with messages that fail.
All three are now required by major providers for any significant sending volume. Without them, your emails will be filtered or rejected before they ever reach a spam folder.
Check your current authentication status — it's free and takes under 10 seconds.
For a step-by-step setup guide, read our complete DMARC setup guide.
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2. Use a Dedicated Sending Domain
Never cold email from your primary business domain. If your main domain gets flagged or blacklisted, you lose your company email too.
Instead, register a dedicated subdomain or a secondary domain for outbound cold outreach:
Set up full SPF, DKIM, and DMARC on the sending domain. This isolates your reputation risk and lets you manage cold outreach independently of your main mail infrastructure.
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3. Warm Up Your Domain Before Scaling
A brand-new domain sending hundreds of emails per day is a major red flag. Inbox providers track sending history — a domain with no history and high volume looks like a spam operation.
Warm-up approach:
| Week | Daily Send Volume | |------|-----------------| | 1 | 10–20 emails/day | | 2 | 25–50 emails/day | | 3 | 50–100 emails/day | | 4+ | Scale gradually |
During warm-up, prioritize sending to engaged contacts who are likely to open and reply. High engagement signals tell providers your domain is legitimate.
Automated warm-up tools can speed this up by simulating engagement between seed accounts — but they don't replace real positive engagement from actual recipients.
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4. Keep Your Sending Volume Consistent
Sudden spikes in sending volume are a major deliverability risk. If you normally send 50 emails per day and suddenly send 2,000, spam filters will take notice.
Best practices:
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5. Write Like a Human, Not a Marketer
Spam filters have become remarkably good at detecting template-style mass emails. The more your cold email looks like a broadcast, the worse it will perform.
Avoid:
Do:
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6. Personalize Beyond Just the First Name
"Hi {{first_name}}" personalization is table stakes and no longer moves the needle. Modern spam filters (and recipients) see through it immediately.
Effective personalization means referencing something specific and relevant:
Even one genuinely personalized line dramatically improves both deliverability (engagement signals) and reply rates.
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7. Verify Your Email List Before Sending
Sending to invalid email addresses hurts your deliverability in two ways:
Keep your bounce rate below 2%. Most email list sources — scraped data, old CRM records, purchased lists — have 10–30% invalid addresses.
Before any campaign:
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8. Monitor Your Spam Complaint Rate
When a recipient marks your email as spam, it sends a signal to the inbox provider. Gmail's Postmaster Tools tracks this as your spam rate — keep it below 0.1%.
Above 0.3% and Gmail will start filtering your emails automatically. Above 0.08% and you're already in a danger zone.
How to keep complaints low:
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9. Set Up a Custom Tracking Domain
Most cold email tools track opens and clicks using links that redirect through a shared domain like click.yourtool.com. If that shared domain has a poor reputation (from other users on the platform), it affects your deliverability.
Set up a custom tracking domain — a subdomain of your sending domain (e.g., track.yourdomain.com) — so your tracking links use your own domain's reputation instead of a shared one.
This is usually a 5-minute DNS change in your email tool's settings, but it makes a meaningful difference in inbox placement.
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10. Monitor Deliverability Continuously
Deliverability isn't a one-time setup — it degrades over time. New senders get added to your organization that aren't in your SPF record. DKIM keys expire. Your domain ends up on a blacklist you don't know about.
Monitor regularly:
Check your domain's deliverability health now — free, instant, no signup required.
For continuous monitoring and alerts when something breaks, see our plans.
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Quick Checklist
Before launching any cold email campaign, verify:
Getting all 10 right is how you consistently land in the inbox instead of spam.
Check Your DMARC Compliance
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