Key Takeaway
Sender reputation is a score that email providers assign to your domain and IP based on sending behavior, engagement, and complaint rates. Building and maintaining a strong reputation requires consistent warmup, clean lists, and smart sending patterns. WarmySender handles warmup and verification automatically to protect and improve your sender reputation.
Every email you send contributes to a score that inbox providers maintain about your domain and IP address. This score — your sender reputation — determines whether your emails reach the inbox, land in spam, or get blocked entirely. Understanding how it works is essential for anyone sending cold email at scale.
What Is Sender Reputation?
Sender reputation is a trust score assigned to your email domain and sending IP address by inbox providers like Gmail, Outlook, and Yahoo. It works similarly to a credit score: positive behaviors build it up, negative behaviors tear it down, and it takes much longer to build than to destroy.
Each major inbox provider calculates reputation independently using their own algorithms. Your reputation with Gmail might be different from your reputation with Outlook. This is why deliverability can vary across providers — your email might hit Gmail’s inbox but Outlook’s spam folder.
The Two Types of Sender Reputation
| Type | What It Measures | Who Controls It | Scope |
|---|---|---|---|
| Domain Reputation | Trust level of your email domain (e.g., yourbrand.com) | You — through sending behavior | All emails from this domain, any IP |
| IP Reputation | Trust level of the sending IP address | Shared with your email provider | All emails from this IP, any domain |
Domain reputation is the more important of the two in 2026. Google shifted to domain-based evaluation years ago, and other providers have followed. This means your reputation travels with your domain regardless of which server you send from.
IP reputation still matters but is less controllable. When you use Google Workspace or Microsoft 365, you share IP addresses with other senders. A good email provider maintains clean IPs, but you have limited individual control.
How Inbox Providers Calculate Your Score
Inbox providers evaluate dozens of signals to calculate your reputation. The most important ones:
Positive Signals (Build Reputation)
Negative Signals (Damage Reputation)
Reputation Levels and What They Mean
| Reputation Level | Inbox Placement | What Happens | How to Get Here |
|---|---|---|---|
| High (Good) | 90-98% | Emails consistently reach inbox | Consistent warmup + clean lists + high engagement |
| Medium | 60-85% | Some emails go to spam or promotions | Inconsistent sending or moderate bounce rates |
| Low | 20-50% | Most emails go to spam | High complaints, bounces, or spam trap hits |
| Bad | 0-15% | Emails blocked or all go to spam | Blacklisted domain, severe abuse signals |
How to Check Your Sender Reputation
Several tools let you monitor your domain and IP reputation:
- Google Postmaster Tools: Free. Shows your domain reputation with Gmail specifically. Grades you as High, Medium, Low, or Bad. Also shows spam rate, authentication results, and encryption data.
- Microsoft SNDS: Free. Smart Network Data Services shows your IP reputation with Outlook/Hotmail.
- MXToolbox: Checks your domain and IP against major blacklists (Spamhaus, Barracuda, SURBL).
- Sender Score (by Validity): Provides a 0-100 score for your sending IP based on complaint rates, unknown user rates, and infrastructure quality.
Building Reputation from Zero
New domains and new mailboxes start with no reputation — which inbox providers treat as suspicious. Building reputation requires patience and the right tools:
Step 1: DNS Authentication. Configure SPF, DKIM, and DMARC. This is the foundation that proves your emails are legitimate.
Step 2: Email Warmup. Use WarmySender to gradually build positive engagement signals over 2-4 weeks. The platform sends warmup emails to real inboxes that open, reply, and rescue your messages from spam — exactly the signals that build reputation.
Step 3: List Verification. Before sending any campaign, verify every email address to eliminate bounces. WarmySender includes built-in verification.
Step 4: Start Small. Launch campaigns with low volume (20-30 emails/day) and increase gradually as your reputation strengthens.
Step 5: Monitor and Maintain. Keep warmup running alongside campaigns. Monitor reputation through Google Postmaster Tools and adjust if metrics decline.
Recovering Damaged Reputation
If your sender reputation has been damaged, recovery is possible but slow:
Recovery steps:
- Stop all cold email campaigns immediately
- Check and resolve any blacklist listings
- Re-verify your entire email list — remove anything questionable
- Run warmup at maximum volume for 2-4 weeks
- Resume sending at very low volume (10-20 emails/day) once placement improves
- Scale back up gradually over several weeks
Reputation Is Everything
In cold email, your sender reputation determines whether your messages reach the inbox or disappear into spam. Every email you send either builds or damages this reputation. WarmySender protects your reputation on two fronts: automated warmup builds and maintains positive engagement signals, while built-in email verification prevents the bounces that destroy it. Together, they keep your sender reputation healthy so your campaigns keep performing.
Protect your sender reputation.
WarmySender automates warmup and email verification to keep your domain reputation healthy.